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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.31820/ejap.20.2.3

Ethics Education from Suffering on Screen? Tragic Visions in Arrival

James MacAllister ; The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom


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Abstract

In this paper I argue that tragic films can have significant potential for ethics education when they prompt audiences to sympathise with suffering on screen. I first summarise two accounts of the relationship between tragic art, moral education and aesthetic value (those provided by Rorty and Lamarque). I then discuss problems with these accounts and explain how a new criterion of aesthetic value might help to resolve them. I thereafter argue that tragic films have potential to ethically educate audiences in a way that enhances the aesthetic value of the films in at least three directions: by deepening moral understanding, by deepening understanding of the nature of human being and ethical purpose and by deepening understanding of ethical theory. I conclude by showing how Denis Villeneuve’s film, Arrival, screens a tragic story with ethics education potential in each of the aforementioned senses.

Keywords

screen suffering; tragic film; ethics education through film; educational ethicism; ethics in Villeneuve’s Arrival

Hrčak ID:

322445

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/322445

Publication date:

18.11.2024.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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