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Janus Head
Volume 12, Issue 1, 2011
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21.
Janus Head:
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Bryne Lewis Allport
Postcard
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22.
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John Pauley
Faulkner’s Tragic Fiction and the Impossibility of Theodicy
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The details of evil will sink any attempt at theodicy. But details of evil are usually- or even necessarily- lost in the abstract discussions of evil in philosophical texts. Hence this essay looks at the details of tragic fiction, specifically in some stories by Faulkner. The initial analysis endeavors to show that fiction gets us closer to the reality of agency than philosophy and so it then gets us closer to the reality of the evils that haunt both individuals and cultures (the two cannot be adequately separated). Finally, the details of the evil analyzed reveal that human beings are actually capable of a self-destruction that annihilates the very grounds of human agency and identity: Faulkner’s tragic fiction reveals that self-destruction is written into the necessary components of agency and identity.
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Robert Garfield McInerney
A Transcontinental Journey Brings Transcendental Understanding: A Review of Existential Psychology East-West
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Contributors
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