Whole Class Discussion: Are you convinced?

Are you convinced?

Are you convinced?

by Emily Green -
Number of replies: 1

Hunt argues that the rise of the epistolary novel allowed individuals to build empathy, which created a growth in human rights. I agree with Hunt in sense that identification and empathy with others – especially those of different backgrounds – are essential in understanding human rights. I have personally felt the ‘post-book blues’ that Hunt highlights through the words of Diderot: “I felt the same sensation that men feel who have been closely entwined and lived together for a long time and who are now on the point of separating. At the end it suddenly seemed to me that I was left alone.” We all share universal human experiences, and I believe that novel reading allows readers to feel a sense of empathy through passionate involvement in the narrative.

Where I respectfully disagree, is with Hunt’s argument that the epistolary novel “laid the foundation for a new political and social order.” Through novel reading, the ruling elite may empathize with fictional characters of lower social standing, but I am critical of how this translates into action against injustice. The empathy that readers experience is passive, therefore I am not fully convinced that the perspective gained through novel reading is enough to drive large-scale social change and advancement of human rights.

In reply to Emily Green

Re: Are you convinced?

by Amanda DiPaolo O'Brien -
So I am going to cut and paste my comment from another post and throw it to you (you may read it twice because you actually commented on the original post of the other one too):

I think what Lynn is saying is that when we identify with characters with different lives experiences, we see the world through different eyes and maybe that is what encourages us to act upon social justices issues in the real world. I don't think she is saying we put a book down and say to ourselves that's it, I'm going to protest our government, but that rather when we see stuff on the news that maybe we would not have thought about or cared about that maybe our perceptions change without us even knowing it and that at that point we might be more inclined to act. Does that make sense?