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dc.contributor.authorMoi, Ruben Rune
dc.date.accessioned2025-03-11T10:09:13Z
dc.date.available2025-03-11T10:09:13Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.description.abstract“What is history? What is love? What is justice? Sanity? Reason? Do the gods really exist, and does it matter?” Professor of law Yxta Maya Murray (2015, 137) certainly asks the grand questions in “Punishment and the Costs of Knowledge,” many of which will be recognized in Shakespeare’s drama, in French philosophy, and by people who appreciate the “good literature” that “summons powerful emotions” and that “disconcerts and puzzles,” as Martha Nussbaum does in Poetic Justice (1995, 5, 6). “Inevitably,” Murray continues, “we find that the lawyer and the artist come to antipodal conclusions, which then gives us occasion to ask: Who is right? The poet, or the judge?” She answers her own judicial scrutiny: “In my class we study ‘Punishment’” (2015, 137). Murray’s discerning questions develop emotionally and logically from Heaney’s poem “Punishment,” and from his controversial collection North (1975). The persona in “Punishment” hovers between compassion and cynicism, and holds up Diogenes’ lantern to himself as much as to others: we are all implicated.en_US
dc.identifier.citationMoi R: The Legacy of Semaus Heaney's North. In: Moi R. Literature's Critique, Subversion, and Transformation of Justice, 2024. Lexington Books p. 99-113en_US
dc.identifier.cristinIDFRIDAID 2331366
dc.identifier.isbn978-1-66695-258-2
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10037/36660
dc.language.isoengen_US
dc.publisherRowman & Littlefielden_US
dc.rights.accessRightsopenAccessen_US
dc.rights.holderCopyright 2024 The Author(s)en_US
dc.titleThe Legacy of Semaus Heaney's Northen_US
dc.type.versionacceptedVersionen_US
dc.typeChapteren_US
dc.typeBokkapittelen_US


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