How to Do Things with Fictions
Joshua Landy
Reviews and Awards
"This book may be most valuable for its call to pedagogical reform. It would be helpful for revising the aims of broad world-lit surveys or humanities courses, or, indeed, for reframing almost any literature class. ...Landy's book also offers persuasive talking points for any defense of the liberal arts mission... His book is a good manual for training Landy's own readers in how to become formative teachers." --Ashley Barnes, Comparative Literature
"Joshua Landy has no patience for the simple-minded moral didacticism that permeates recent literary theory and philosophy. Sure-footed and light-handed, he emphasizes the 'formative' rather than the 'informative' function of literary fiction. Eloquent, erudite, witty, and just as passionate, Landy has given us a new way of looking at the importance of fiction for life--a new and marvelous 'defence of poesy.'" --Alexander Nehamas, author of Only a Promise of Happiness
"What do we gain from reading fiction? Joshua Landy's brilliant new book advances a provocative answer with impressive verve, erudition, and insight. His discussion ranges from the New Testament to Plato, Mallarmé, and Beckett, among many others. No reader will put down the book unaffected, or think of fiction in quite the same way again." --Charles L. Griswold, author of Self-Knowledge in Plato's Phaedrus
"In this wonderfully engaging book, Joshua Landy writes against all of those (rather depressing) theories that argue for literary texts as guides for moral improvement, or as 'messages' for the reader. Instead, Landy identifies what he calls 'formative fiction'--literature that trains the reader in the act of reading itself--a compelling and refreshing study." --Francoise Meltzer, author of Seeing Double: Baudelaire's Modernity
"This terrific book pulls no punches in engaging with scholarly debates, critiquing an array of knowledge-seeking approaches to fiction. Landy's constructive work, exemplified in the verve and affection with which he treats his 'formative fictions,' is persistently humane and practical, pressing us for openness to the vital exercise fictions offer." --Eileen John, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Warwick
"If we persist in reading complicated books for something more than their plot, Landy has at least given us a series of thoughtful and persuasive reasons for doing so." --The Guardian
"It is rare to read a work in which the sense comes through so fully of what it must be like to sit in the author's classroom; in this case, it is clear that Stanford students enjoy an intellectual treat, one now available to many others...Essential." --Choice
"The book's philosophical strength lies in its sophisticated readings of certain philosophical and literary works as ethically significant rather than morally didactic...these readings will prove provocative for philosophers and literary scholars alike...For those receptive to it, this is a richly rewarding text." --Philosophy in Review