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Do You See What I See? The Education of the Reader in Rousseau's Emile
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2012
Abstract
Rousseau first glimpsed the principle of the natural goodness of man in the so-called “Illumination of Vincennes,” and he made it his mission as an author to persuade his readers of the truth of that vision. Rousseau must persuade his readers that they are deceived by what they see before their own eyes and that they must learn to see anew—through his eyes. In order to educate his reader, Rousseau consistently uses rhetorical and literary techniques that are meant to change the reader's perspective. His use of these techniques is particularly pervasive in Emile. The present analysis examines Rousseau's education of the reader of his pedagogical treatise, especially through comparisons he draws between his imaginary pupil, Emile, and actual children that are meant to persuade the reader of the truth of what first appears to be imaginary and the falsity of what the reader previously believed was real.
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References
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6 Rousseau, Discourse on Inequality, 91. For an excellent analysis of Rousseau's complex use of the image of the statue of Glaucus, see Velkley, Richard, Being after Rousseau: Philosophy and Culture in Question (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002), 36–39Google Scholar.
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16 Rousseau to Philibert Cramer, October 13, 1764, quoted in Harari, Josué V., “Therapeutic Pedagogy: Rousseau's Emile,” MLN 97, no. 4 (1982): 788CrossRefGoogle Scholar; my translation.
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20 Rousseau, Favre Manuscript of “Emile,” in Collected Writings, 13:14–16. For other instances in the original version of comparing pupils or other similar devices, all of them rather incidental, see 37–38, 57, 94, 101.
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23 Close examination of the allegory reveals that it is not, in fact, what it seems to be. Two considerations immediately suggest the complexity, nay deceitfulness, of Rousseau's use of the allegory. First, he introduces Thetis dipping Achilles into the Styx immediately after complaining of mothers keeping their offspring away from threats to their mortality, a lesson exactly opposite to the allegory. Second, note that he sets off “according to the fable” as a kind of parenthetical set off by commas, suggesting that his own version of the story is different from the original. This line of interpretation would be supported by what he later in the work says about fables (112–16). For an extended analysis of the engravings for Emile, see John T. Scott, “Re-Presenting Achilles in Rousseau's Emile,” presented at UCLA Clark Memorial Library, October 4–5, 2002.
24 Seneca, De ira II.13.
25 Echoing Allan Bloom's apt characterization of Emile as “a Phenomenology of the Mind posing as Dr. Spock” (introduction to Emile, 3).
26 For Rousseau on pity, see Discourse on Inequality, 130–33; Essay on the Origin of Languages, in Collected Writings, 7:305–6; Emile, 221–23.
27 Fish, Surprised by Sin, 4.
28 Ibid., 14.
29 Iser, Implied Reader, 30.
30 Iser, Implied Reader, 29.
31 See especially the preface and the second preface (“Conversation about Novels”) in Julie, or the New Heloise, in Collected Writings, 6:3–22.
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33 It is interesting to note in this regard that the title Emile evokes the Latin aemulare, to imitate or emulate.
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36 Sterne, Laurence, Tristram Shandy (London: Cochrane, 1832)Google Scholar, 1:98, quoted by Iser, Implied Reader, 31; see also Iser, 275.
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