The Virtues of Vengeance
Peter A. French
April 2001
272 pages, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1076-1, $29.95
Although most moral philosophers
reject vengeance as a barbaric sentiment, Peter French argues
that it has fallen into disrepute without being seriously examined
with respect to its real moral value. In beginning his philosophical
examination of the virtues of vengeance, he investigates the
use of vengeance themes in literature and popular culture. Literary
works from the Iliad to Hamlet and modern film
Westerns such as Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven are reviewed
in his exploration of the philosophical and ethical aspects of
vengeance. He then concentrates on the conditions that could
make acts of vengeance virtuous.
Film Westerns play an illustrative role in French's work because
of their frequent use of the vengeance plot. As self-conscious
morality plays, they seldom wander from an investigation of the
social, psychological, political, and moral implications of revenge.
French uses such classics as The Searchers and Winchester
'73 to identify crucial philosophical elements of the concept
of vengeance that are then examined in detail in later parts
of the book.
In the course of his study of vengeance as a moral concept,
French exposes important distinctions between types of moral
theories (karmic and non-karmic) and between people who are morally
handicapped and those who are morally challenged. He examines
concepts relevant to vengeance such as honor, moral authority,
and evil, and issues such as the rationality of revenge and proportionality
in punishment.
French concludes that exiling vengeance to a dark corner of
human action has robbed morality of one of its most potent and
persuasive elements and that mere condemnation or ostracism are
inadequate responses to heinous acts. The maintenance of the
authority of morality often requires more hostile responses.
His book challenges us to reconsider the value, indeed the virtue,
of various responses to evil and may serve as a metaethical map
of the conceptual geography of vengeance for those daring to
explore what has generally been assumed in the literature of
ethics to be forbidden territory.
"A fascinating and provocative virtue-ethical defense
of the morality of vengeance."--Michael Slote, author
of From Morality to Virtue
"French makes a convincing case for the central moral
importance of revenge, honor, desert, retributive punishment,
and evil. . . . An important book that should be widely read."--John
Kekes, author of Moral Wisdom and Good Lives and Facing
Evil
"French has undertaken a heroic task, to not only defend
vengeance and demonstrate its prevalence throughout our history
and our literature but to actually praise its virtues as essential
for morality and justice. He has done so brilliantly. Highly
recommended, but not, perhaps, for those with vengeance already
on their minds."--Robert C. Solomon, author of A
Passion for Justice
"An inventive and fearlessly provocative book."--Margaret
Urban Walker, author of Moral Understandings
PETER A. FRENCH holds the Lincoln Chair in Ethics and
is Director of the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics at Arizona
State University. Among his other books are Responsibility
Matters, also from Kansas; Corporate Ethics; and,
most recently, Cowboy Metaphysics: Ethics and Death in Westerns.
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