A Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry James

This dissertation argues that the novels of Henry James offer a conception of personhood and of human freedom better able to explain and unify private law than the conceptions currently dominant in private law theory. I begin by laying out the two conceptual frameworks that now dominate private law...

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Main Author: Brudner Nadler, Jennifer
Other Authors: Morgan, Ed
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34819
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-348192013-11-02T03:43:08ZA Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry JamesBrudner Nadler, Jenniferprivate lawHenry Jameslaw and literatureprivate law theory0398This dissertation argues that the novels of Henry James offer a conception of personhood and of human freedom better able to explain and unify private law than the conceptions currently dominant in private law theory. I begin by laying out the two conceptual frameworks that now dominate private law theory: Kantian right and the feminist ethic of care. I argue that Kantian right‟s exclusive focus on respect for freedom of choice makes it unable to explain private law doctrines founded upon concern for human well-being, including unjust enrichment, unconscionability, and liability for negligence. However, feminism‟s ethic of care, which can be understood as a response to the Kantian abstraction from considerations of well-being and need, is also incomplete, because its understanding of the person as essentially connected to others fails to respect human separateness. I then offer readings of James‟ novels—The Portrait of a Lady, What Maisie Knew, and The Ambassadors—that show how vindicating individual worth requires both respect for abstract agency‟s separateness and freedom to choose, on the one hand, and concern for the dependent individual‟s well-being and autonomous flourishing, on the other. I argue that these two ideas are complementary parts of a complete understanding of human dignity and freedom. Finally, I argue that this understanding illuminates doctrines of private law that remain mysterious on the Kantian account while avoiding feminism‟s tendency to immerse private law in public law.Morgan, EdDyzenhaus, David2012-112012-12-18T18:31:10ZNO_RESTRICTION2012-12-18T18:31:10Z2012-12-18Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/34819en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic private law
Henry James
law and literature
private law theory
0398
spellingShingle private law
Henry James
law and literature
private law theory
0398
Brudner Nadler, Jennifer
A Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry James
description This dissertation argues that the novels of Henry James offer a conception of personhood and of human freedom better able to explain and unify private law than the conceptions currently dominant in private law theory. I begin by laying out the two conceptual frameworks that now dominate private law theory: Kantian right and the feminist ethic of care. I argue that Kantian right‟s exclusive focus on respect for freedom of choice makes it unable to explain private law doctrines founded upon concern for human well-being, including unjust enrichment, unconscionability, and liability for negligence. However, feminism‟s ethic of care, which can be understood as a response to the Kantian abstraction from considerations of well-being and need, is also incomplete, because its understanding of the person as essentially connected to others fails to respect human separateness. I then offer readings of James‟ novels—The Portrait of a Lady, What Maisie Knew, and The Ambassadors—that show how vindicating individual worth requires both respect for abstract agency‟s separateness and freedom to choose, on the one hand, and concern for the dependent individual‟s well-being and autonomous flourishing, on the other. I argue that these two ideas are complementary parts of a complete understanding of human dignity and freedom. Finally, I argue that this understanding illuminates doctrines of private law that remain mysterious on the Kantian account while avoiding feminism‟s tendency to immerse private law in public law.
author2 Morgan, Ed
author_facet Morgan, Ed
Brudner Nadler, Jennifer
author Brudner Nadler, Jennifer
author_sort Brudner Nadler, Jennifer
title A Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry James
title_short A Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry James
title_full A Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry James
title_fullStr A Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry James
title_full_unstemmed A Life of One’s Own: Freedom and Obligation in the Novels of Henry James
title_sort life of one’s own: freedom and obligation in the novels of henry james
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34819
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