Jonathan Gottschall (born September 20, 1972) is an American literary scholar specializing in literature and evolution. He holds the title of Distinguished Fellow in the English department of Washington & Jefferson College in Pennsylvania.[2][4] He is the author or editor of eight books.
His work The Rape of Troy: Evolution, Violence and the World of Homer analyzes violence in the Homericepic poemsIliad and Odyssey through the lens of evolutionary psychology. Gottschall argues that nearly all of the central violent conflicts in the epics originate in conflicts over women. He argues that this reflects an actual shortage of women in ancient Greek society driven by female infanticide and the practice of concentrating enslaved women in the households of powerful men, who were treated as the masters exclusive sexual property.[7]
Literature, Science and a New Humanities advocates that the humanities, and literary studies in particular, need to avail themselves of quantitative and objective methods of inquiry as well as the traditional qualitative and subjective, if they are to produce cumulative, progressive knowledge, and provides a number of case studies that apply quantitative methods to fairy and folk tale around the world to answer questions about human universals and differences.[8]
Gottschall's book, The Storytelling Animal: How Stories Make Us Human (Houghton Mifflin 2012), is about the evolutionary mystery of storytelling—about the way we shape stories, and stories shape us.[9] A review by The Virginian-Pilot said "Gottschall assesses and accounts for that powerful narrative attraction in a compelling chronicle of his own...and it is a certifiable knee-slap, three-pipe, blue-moon ripsnorter.[10] The Storytelling Animal was a New York Times Editor's Choice selection and a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize.
In the book The Professor in the Cage: Why Men Fight and Why We Like to Watch (Penguin 2015), Gottschall describes the three years he spent at a Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) gym trying to learn how to fight. He uses this experience as a way to explore the evolutionary psychology of violence, masculinity, and sports.
In 2021, Gottschall published The Story Paradox: How Our Love of Storytelling Builds Societies and Tears Them Down. Kirkus Reviews credited Gottschall with providing "fresh insights about the ways we understand reality."[11] The book also received a harshly critical review by Timothy D. Snyder in the New York Times.[12] This led to letters to the editor by Gottschall and Steven Pinker, whose work was also sharply criticized in the review.[13]
List of works
The Literary Animal: Evolution and the Nature of Narrative (2005) – edited with David Sloan Wilson. ISBN978-0810122864
The Rape of Troy: Evolution, Violence and the World of Homer (2008)
^Easterlin, Nancy (April 2009). "Literature, Science, and the New Humanities (review)". Philosophy and Literature. 33 (1): 230–33. doi:10.1353/phl.0.0035. S2CID31585802.