Author/Authors :
ÖZCAN, Işıl Dokuz Eylül University - Faculty of Letters - American Culture and Literature Department, Turkey
Title Of Article :
Ethical Life Redefined in Jonathan Safran Foer’s Eating Animals
Abstract :
This study analyzes the young American novelist Jonathan Safran Foer’s astounding work of creative nonfiction Eating Animals (2009) from two ethical frameworks. First, Foer demonstrates contemporary American creative nonfiction’s propensity for ethical reflection and dedication to the forceful investigation of the disregarded and dismissed aspects of our daily moral existence, and demonstrates the sheer amount of research as well as intellectual bearing that such reflection requires. Second, inasmuch as Eating Animals is a study in/of ethics, it also presents new vistas for the recent “ethical turn” in literary studies whose theoretical focus remains limited to the study of the novel. Through a close reading of Eating Animals for its avowed ethical stance and its enriching contribution in the mode of a transfigured reenactment of the current (re)turn to ethics within literary studies, this study bears witness to a new direction in contemporary American literature that draws its force from contemporary creative nonfiction’s increasing proclivity for truthful and ethical storytelling.
NaturalLanguageKeyword :
Jonathan Safran Foer , Eating Animals , creative nonfiction , the ethical turn , storytelling
JournalTitle :
Mediterranean Journal Of Humanities