Spy films and intellectual alienation

The article analyzes spy films as examples of alienation within modern office life. It shows how intellectual socialization within this type of life can lead to a corruption of a person’s moral capabilities. The article studies this corruption process with a focus on how the moral person, in this ca...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Due, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: David Publishing Company 2019
_version_ 1797110718976229376
author Due, R
author_facet Due, R
author_sort Due, R
collection OXFORD
description The article analyzes spy films as examples of alienation within modern office life. It shows how intellectual socialization within this type of life can lead to a corruption of a person’s moral capabilities. The article studies this corruption process with a focus on how the moral person, in this case the fictional spy character, uses her intellect in relation to other mental faculties and in relation to the person’s own biographical experience of time. With reference to Plato and Hannah Arendt, the article shows that the professional use of intellect has an active and a passive quality. It is passive in so far as the person acquires it gradually, through training. It is active on the other hand, since the person willingly submits to this training. The moral stakes of these spy narratives thus concerns the choice to become a certain kind of person by subjecting oneself to a certain type of intellectual training. Memory forms an entry into this question of choice in all the examined films, hence memory is also at the centre of my analysis. This psychological mode of interpretation is inspired by Paul Ricoeur’s philosophy of narrative.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:00:13Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:42604c70-e91c-4778-83c9-647359a22050
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T08:00:13Z
publishDate 2019
publisher David Publishing Company
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:42604c70-e91c-4778-83c9-647359a220502023-09-19T13:14:31ZSpy films and intellectual alienationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:42604c70-e91c-4778-83c9-647359a22050EnglishSymplectic ElementsDavid Publishing Company2019Due, RThe article analyzes spy films as examples of alienation within modern office life. It shows how intellectual socialization within this type of life can lead to a corruption of a person’s moral capabilities. The article studies this corruption process with a focus on how the moral person, in this case the fictional spy character, uses her intellect in relation to other mental faculties and in relation to the person’s own biographical experience of time. With reference to Plato and Hannah Arendt, the article shows that the professional use of intellect has an active and a passive quality. It is passive in so far as the person acquires it gradually, through training. It is active on the other hand, since the person willingly submits to this training. The moral stakes of these spy narratives thus concerns the choice to become a certain kind of person by subjecting oneself to a certain type of intellectual training. Memory forms an entry into this question of choice in all the examined films, hence memory is also at the centre of my analysis. This psychological mode of interpretation is inspired by Paul Ricoeur’s philosophy of narrative.
spellingShingle Due, R
Spy films and intellectual alienation
title Spy films and intellectual alienation
title_full Spy films and intellectual alienation
title_fullStr Spy films and intellectual alienation
title_full_unstemmed Spy films and intellectual alienation
title_short Spy films and intellectual alienation
title_sort spy films and intellectual alienation
work_keys_str_mv AT duer spyfilmsandintellectualalienation