Abstract
Anxiety concerning the decline and fall of civilization appears throughout Walker Percy’s body of work. Smith argues that what sets Percy’s account of this issue apart from others rests in his preoccupation not so much with depicting actual disaster for what it might tell us about human nature, politics, or our souls, but rather, with his focus on the end of our society as a clue that might help explain our predicament. Percy saw his role as reading the signs of our spiritual and social disorders, and rendering them intelligible to an audience that increasingly possessed a language inadequate to understanding the situation. Percy’s analysis of our attitudes toward catastrophe, disaster, war, and the end of civilization proves a fertile ground for exploring the fault lines in our social and political life.
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Notes
- 1.
On this, see Mosse 1990. Mosse strives to explain the way soldiers saw value in the war as a consciously constructed myth, but Percy might lead us to rethink this point.
- 2.
Another example where Binx is dispensed from alienation through violent accident comes during Binx’s drive with Sharon Kincaid, when they have an accident and Sharon cares for him (MG, pp. 124–128).
- 3.
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———. 1993. More Conversations with Walker Percy. Ed. Lewis A. Lawson and Victor A. Kramer. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.
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Smith, B.A. (2018). Percy on the Allure of Violence and Destruction. In: Marsh, L. (eds) Walker Percy, Philosopher. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-77968-3_12
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