克林斯·布鲁克斯

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引用次数: 0

摘要

科勒斯·布鲁克斯(生于1906年)1994年),继t·s·艾略特和i·a·理查兹之后,可以说是最有影响力的现代文学评论家之一。他通常被认为是美国“新批评家”的代表,因此在近70年的时间里,他既受到高度赞扬,也受到无情的攻击。布鲁克斯是卫理公会牧师的儿子,曾就读于范德比尔特大学、杜兰大学和牛津大学,与罗伯特·佩恩·沃伦和约翰·克罗·兰森有着密切而持久的联系,随后接受了路易斯安那州立大学和耶鲁大学的教职。在这方面,他提出了一个独特的问题:对他作品的批判性评价通常被嵌入到对新批评主义的争论中,就好像它是一场连贯的“运动”一样——布鲁克斯一直抵制这种观点,但带着文明的怀疑态度。布鲁克斯并没有成为一个体系建构理论家的明确抱负,也没有急于采纳或接受其他被称为“新批评家”的人提出的理论事业。在这一趋势中,他是有先见之明的:几乎所有明确的新批判理论主张都被证明是不可持续的或有严重争议的(参见Searle 2005和Schryer 2012[均引用于批判背景和摘要])。对布鲁克斯的提及很多,但对他作品的集中研究却出奇地少。他经常抱怨他的立场被歪曲了,这具有讽刺意味的后果是,他似乎实际上是新批评主义的捍卫者,因为他详细地回应了这些抱怨。布鲁克斯作为他的同事(尤其参见格里姆肖1998年[引用于批判性背景和摘要])在塑造大学文学课程和模拟批判性实践方面最为有效,影响了几乎所有专业学科领域。布鲁克斯致力于“作为文学”的文学教学,通过出版教科书、散文、文学史、主要作者研究、文本研究和讲座来完善“细读”策略,始终伴随着专业和公共服务,作为“新批评主义”崛起的一部分,但也将英语系作为人文教育的核心。问题的复杂性在于布鲁克斯的矛盾心理,即综合的理论体系,包括其他新批评家的建议,是否与文学本身的反思性质相容。20世纪70年代以后,新批评所代表的松散的专业和学科共识的破裂,以及补充、取代或取代新批评的“新”方法和理论的充满危机的扩散,在一定程度上受到进步的推动,严重复杂化了继承或传统的批评“理论”应该是什么。布鲁克斯职业生涯的生命力和持久性——以及“新批评主义”理论的模糊性——在于他坚信文学本质上是一种教化和道德力量,与其说依赖于教条,不如说依赖于通过对文学的反思而产生的富有想象力的发现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cleanth Brooks
Cleanth Brooks (b. 1906–d. 1994), after T. S. Eliot and I. A. Richards, was arguably among the most influential modern literary critics. He is commonly identified as the representative American “New Critic,” who was subject accordingly both to high praise and to relentless attack through nearly seven decades. The son of a Methodist minister, Brooks studied at Vanderbilt, Tulane, and Oxford, having close and lasting associations with Robert Penn Warren and John Crowe Ransom, subsequently accepting faculty positions at LSU and Yale. He presents, in this regard, a unique problem: critical appraisals of his work are commonly embedded in arguments over New Criticism as if it were a coherent “movement”—a point of view Brooks resisted consistently, but with civilized skepticism. Brooks had no explicit ambitions of being a system-building theorist, nor any eagerness to adopt or take up theoretical enterprises advanced by others also identified as “New Critics.” In this tendency he was prescient: virtually all explicit New Critical theoretical claims have proved to be unsustainable or seriously controversial (Cf. Searle 2005 and Schryer 2012 [both cited under Critical Background and Summaries]). Mentions of Brooks are abundant, but focused studies of his writing are surprisingly rare. His frequent complaints that his positions had been misrepresented had the ironic consequence that he appeared to be the de facto defender of New Criticism, because he replied to complaints in detail. Brooks as a colleague (see especially Grimshaw 1998 [cited under Critical Background and Summaries]) was most effective in shaping university literature programs and modeling critical practices, affecting almost all areas of professional disciplinary concern. Brooks was intent on the teaching of literature “as literature,” refining strategies of “close reading” through publications of textbooks, essays, literary history, studies of major authors, and textual scholarship and lectures, always accompanied by professional and public service, as part of the rise of “New Criticism” to dominance, but also grounding English departments as central to humanities education. The complication is Brooks’s ambivalence as to whether comprehensive theoretical systems, including proposals by other New Critics, were compatible with the reflective nature of literature itself. After the 1970s, the fracturing of the loose professional and disciplinary consensus that New Criticism had come to represent, and the crisis-laden proliferation of “newer” approaches and theories supplementing, supplanting, or replacing New Criticism, severely complicated inherited or traditional views of what “theory” in criticism should be, driven in part by the impetus of progress. The vitality and endurance of Brooks’s career—and the theoretical ambiguity of “New Criticism”—lies in his conviction that literature was an essentially civilizing and moral force, dependent less on doctrine than imaginative discovery through reflective engagement with literature.
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