Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

The Novel as Therapy: Ministrations of Voice in an Age of Risk

Waugh, Patricia

The Novel as Therapy: Ministrations of Voice in an Age of Risk Thumbnail


Authors



Abstract

Examining relations between 'therapy culture' and the 'risk society', this essay suggests that the novel developed to offer a powerful workout for the kinds of socio-cognitive capacities and gratifications required by the complex and 'emergent' cultures of modernity: recursive skills of mindreading and mental time-travelling, the negotiation of plural ontologies. Its development of a unique mode of 'double voicing' allowed readers to situate the interior life in a complex and dynamic relation to the social. Reading novels challenges the default, making 'safe', capacities of the probablistic or Bayesian brain. In its self-referentiality and invention of the idea of fictionality, the novel provides an education into awareness of the limits of models and their dangerous fetishisation. The novel therefore answers Wittgenstein's search for a discourse that might provide a therapy for errors in thinking, embedded deep in structural and analogical functions of language and especially those perceptual metaphors of vision that carry the epistemological beliefs that looking in is the route to self-transparency.

Citation

Waugh, P. (2015). The Novel as Therapy: Ministrations of Voice in an Age of Risk. Journal of the British Academy, 3, 35-68. https://doi.org/10.5871/jba/003.035

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 31, 2015
Online Publication Date Aug 7, 2015
Publication Date Aug 7, 2015
Deposit Date Jan 24, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jan 25, 2017
Journal Journal of the British Academy
Publisher British Academy
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 3
Pages 35-68
DOI https://doi.org/10.5871/jba/003.035
Publisher URL http://www.britac.ac.uk/publications/novel-therapy-ministrations-voice-age-risk

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations