Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 328
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4422-5384-1 • Paperback • August 2016 • $19.95 • (£14.99)
978-1-4422-6976-7 • eBook • August 2016 • $18.95 • (£14.99)
Jacob Held has written extensively on philosophy and popular culture, having edited Dr. Seuss and Philosophy and Roald Dahl and Philosophy, coedited James Bond and Philosophy, and contributed to volumes on the Beatles, South Park, and Watchmen, to name a few. He teaches philosophy at the University of Central Arkansas and lives in Conway, Arkansas.
Introduction: On Writing Popular Philosophy 1
Jacob M. Held
1 There Is No God in Desperation: Tak and the Problem of Evil 13
C. Taylor Sutton and Jacob Held
2 Female Subjectivity in Carrie 35
Kellye Byal
3 “Sometimes Dead Is Better”: King, Daedalus, Dragon-
Tyrants, and Deathism 47
Katherine Allen
4 “Gan Is Dead”: Nietzsche and Roland’s Eternal Recurrence 71
Garret Merriam
5 Rāma of Gilead: Hindu Philosophy in The Dark Tower 83
Matthew A. Butkus
6 What’s Wrong with Roland?: Utilitarianism and the Dark
Tower 97
Greg Littmann
7 Stephen King and Aristotelian Friendship: An Analysis of
The Body and Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank
Redemption 113
Bertha Alvarez Manninen
8 Propaganda and Pedagogy for Apt Pupils 131
Michael K. Potter and Cam Cobb
9 The Shining’s Overlook Hotel as Heterotopia 147
Elizabeth Hornbeck
10 Broadcast Dystopia: Power and Violence in The Running
Man and The Long Walk 161
Joseph J. Foy and Timothy M. Dale
11 Stephen King and the Art of Horror 173
Greg Littmann
12 “You Weren’t Hired to Philosophize, Torrance”: The Death
of the Author in The Shining 195
Charles Bane
13 What Happens to the Present When It Becomes the Past:
Time Travel and the Nature of Time in The Langoliers 207
Paul R. Daniels
14 Notes on Foreknowledge, Truthmaking, and
Counterfactuals from The Dead Zone 219
Tuomas W. Manninen
15 Time Belongs to the Tower 231
Randall Auxier
16 Ur 88,416 253
Randall Auxier
17 From Desperation to Haven: Horror, Compassion, and
Arthur Schopenhauer 277
Jacob M. Held
Ka-tet: Author Biographies 299
Author Stephen King, despite his popularity, is largely derided in academic circles, typecast as a genre-fiction horror novelist. In this collection of essays concerning different philosophical views as they relate to King’s work, Held argues that horror is the perfect category in which philosophy can thrive because it forces readers to be aware of things hidden deep and dark within our basest selves. What we fear goes a long way toward defining us as people, and King has always been well known for tapping into these anxieties and exploiting them in his writing. It is refreshing to see King finally viewed through a scholarly lens, with pieces on topics such as reading The Dark Tower as a nihilistic text, using Carrie to discuss the definition of womanhood as 'Other' in a male-centric society, and Aristotelian friendship in The Body and Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption. VERDICT King’s 'Constant Readers' will rejoice in this appreciation of their academically misaligned hero; students of philosophy, collegiate or casual, will also enjoy this text, giving them a familiar context to a field that can confuse the best of us.
— Library Journal
"A splendidly stimulating anthology that delves deep into the treasures of Stephen King's work and brings back riches we may not have noticed. Challenging and searching, these essays are fun to read too. Like all the best criticism, they send us back for a fresh look at the original."
— Ramsey Campbell, author of The Grin of the Dark and The Kind Folk
"The world around us is chock full of philosophical issues. So is the compelling fiction of Stephen King, which is part of its allure. The essays in this book raise those issues and discuss them well, often even brilliantly, using his stories to unearth major philosophical questions that all thoughtful people should pursue. Highly recommended for King fans and anyone interested in philosophy!"
— Tom Morris, bestselling author of If Aristotle Ran General Motors, The Stoic Art of Living, The Oasis Within
"Stephen King’s work finally gets its philosophical due. Drawing on thinkers from Aristotle to Nietzsche, this book sheds light on complex issues like the nature of evil while revealing hidden depths of horror and insight."
— William Irwin, King's College, Pennsylvania
Contributions by Katherine Allen, Randall E. Auxier, Charles Bane, Matthew Butkus, Kellye Byal, Cam Cobb, Timothy Dale, Paul R. Daniels, Joseph J. Foy, Bertha Alvarez Manninen, Tuomas W. Manninen, Garret Merriam, Michael K. Potter, and C. Taylor Sutton