This volume compiles twelve essays that reflect the surging interest in
the Irish-born author Iris Murdoch as both a writer and philosopher.
Beyond her impressive body of philosophical works, Murdoch produced
twenty-six novels, several plays, and numerous poems, short stories, and
essays during her multifaceted career. The prolific novelist-philosopher
has drawn attention from scholars in multiple disciplines, which
reflects her range of interests as well as the accessibility of her work
from varied perspectives.
The first part of the collection focuses on Murdoch's literary works and
approach to art. Frances White's opening essay examines the influence of
Virginia Woolf on Murdoch, while Elaine Morley deals with attention and
"unselfing" in the writer's works. Much can be learned from Murdoch's
letters, as Miles Leeson and Anne Rowe demonstrate in their respective
contributions. David James explores Murdoch's influence on fellow Irish
writer John Banville. Finally, Pamela Osborn and Rivka Isaacson offer
vastly different perspectives on Murdoch's fourth novel, The Bell, in
the two essays that round out the literature-centric half of the
collection.
Part two highlights concepts in and approaches to Murdoch's
philosophical thought. Tony Milligan writes of the meanings of
puritanism and truthfulness in Murdoch's philosophical writings and
essays and in her novel A Fairly Honourable Defeat. Julián Jiménez
Heffernan's contribution centers on Murdoch's confrontation with the
notion of contingency. Using the philosophical lens of metaxu, Kate
Larson suggests a new approach to Murdoch's thought by looking at it in
relation to that of Simone Weil. Paul Martens locates the similarities
of structure in Murdoch's The Black Prince and Søren Kierkegaard's
Fear and Trembling. Lastly, Matthew Martinuk delves into the affinity
of thought between Charles Taylor and Murdoch.
By examining both Murdoch's influences and those she has influenced,
Iris Murdoch Connected constructs complex new understandings of this
formidable writer's vast contributions to literature and philosophy.