《职业批评:约翰·吉罗伊的文学研究组织论文集》(书评)

IF 0.1 3区 文学 0 LITERATURE
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Working from a methodological framework derived from the sociology of professions, Guillory produces a broad sketch of the history of the study of texts—\"the oldest kind of organized study in Western History, excepting only rhetoric\" (354)—to consider the establishment of the discipline of literary criticism in the United States during the 1920s and '30s, exploring the interrelations between two major historical developments. On the one hand, Guillory asks how criticism overcame earlier disciplinary formations to be institutionalized within the university at the time of the emergence of the modern system of disciplines; on the other, he asks how literary critics as a social group established their main practice—the professing of criticism—as a form of professional discourse. The problem, Guillory holds, lies in the order in which these events took place, inverting the usual sequence, \"Literary study became a profession before it became a discipline\" (7). [End Page 596] This inversion, Guillory argues, resulted in a good deal of the problems that afflict the discipline in its crestfallen present: namely, uncertainty over its object of study, questions about its relevance in society, and overcompensating bravado about its social role. The book tells the story of how the predecessors of literary criticism—from the millenarian aegis of rhetoric to the short-lived experiments with belles-lettres, philology, and literary history, as well as the theoretical models and methods literary criticism developed for the study of texts—have all played their part in shaping the current organization of literary study as a discourse of knowledge. Simultaneously, he shows how the unresolved tensions left in the wake of this chronology continue to trouble the discipline's understanding of itself, its objects of study, and its aims. From this argument, set in Part I, \"radiate the semi-independent studies\" (Guillory 2022, 10) on various aspects of the discipline that Guillory presents in Parts II and III and that aim to understand the simultaneous processes of professional formation and deformation he claims have marked literary criticism since its inception as a university discipline. The modern university institutionalizes these forms of knowledge, organizing them into discrete disciplines through the differentiation of its objects and methods, and regulates the practices of intellectual inquiry that legitimize the production of knowledge about these objects. Professing Criticism consists of a series of illuminating essays on these aspects of the historical development of English studies, on the humanities more broadly, and on the current state of the discipline. Guillory is both severe and honest in his assessment; the picture painted is bleak without needing to wax hyperbolic about the gravity of the situation nor grandstanding in ratifying the value of the humanities and of literary study in particular. Quite the contrary. Soberingly, Guillory seeks to provide more modest justifications for the study of texts than those that have resulted from the literary scholar's professional deformation: an overstatement of the aims and impact of literary criticism that justify it as an intrinsically radical political activity. For all the despair the book seems to have elicited, Guillory's final plea for hope is more forceful than its throat-clearing suggests. Instead of presenting a eulogy of the discipline, Guillory ultimately asks what form the discipline should take going forward, and what role the professional and scholarly practices that define literary criticism today ought to play within its future formation. 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The book tells the story of how the predecessors of literary criticism—from the millenarian aegis of rhetoric to the short-lived experiments with belles-lettres, philology, and literary history, as well as the theoretical models and methods literary criticism developed for the study of texts—have all played their part in shaping the current organization of literary study as a discourse of knowledge. Simultaneously, he shows how the unresolved tensions left in the wake of this chronology continue to trouble the discipline's understanding of itself, its objects of study, and its aims. From this argument, set in Part I, \\\"radiate the semi-independent studies\\\" (Guillory 2022, 10) on various aspects of the discipline that Guillory presents in Parts II and III and that aim to understand the simultaneous processes of professional formation and deformation he claims have marked literary criticism since its inception as a university discipline. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

评议人:《职业批评:约翰·吉洛里的文学研究组织随笔》,亚历杭德罗·凯西-切瓦洛斯·吉洛里,约翰·2022。职业批评:文学研究组织论文集。芝加哥,伊利诺伊州:芝加哥大学出版社。hc 105.00美元。$29.00 sc. 456页。与文化资本:文学经典形成的问题(1993)一样,与公开批评:关于文学研究组织的论文(2022)约翰·吉洛里已经制作了一个大师的展示,展示了学术最诚实,自我意识最好的成就。这本书提出了每个从事英语和更广泛的人文学科工作的人都应该考虑的问题。吉洛里从职业社会学的方法论框架出发,对文本研究的历史——“除了修辞学之外,西方历史上最古老的有组织的研究”(354)——进行了广泛的概述,考察了20世纪20年代和30年代美国文学批评学科的建立,探索了两个主要历史发展之间的相互关系。一方面,纪洛里问,在现代学科体系出现的时候,批评是如何克服早期的学科形成而在大学内部制度化的;另一方面,他问文学批评家作为一个社会群体是如何将他们的主要实践——批评的公开发表——作为一种专业话语的形式。吉洛里认为,问题在于这些事件发生的顺序,颠倒了通常的顺序,“文学研究在成为一门学科之前就成为一种职业”(7)。吉洛里认为,这种颠倒导致了许多困扰这门学科的问题:即,对其研究对象的不确定性,对其与社会的相关性的质疑,以及对其社会角色的过度补偿。这本书讲述了文学批评的前辈们的故事,从千年的修辞学的支持到短暂的实验,与美丽的字母,文献学,文学史,以及理论模型和方法文学批评开发的文本研究,都在塑造文学研究的当前组织作为知识的话语发挥了作用。与此同时,他还展示了在这个年代之后遗留下来的未解决的紧张局势如何继续困扰着这门学科对自身、研究对象和目标的理解。从第一部分的论点出发,“辐射半独立研究”(Guillory 2022, 10),这是Guillory在第二部分和第三部分中提出的学科的各个方面,旨在理解他声称的专业形成和变形的同时过程,这标志着文学批评从一开始就成为一门大学学科。现代大学将这些形式的知识制度化,通过对其对象和方法的区分,将它们组织成离散的学科,并规范知识探究的实践,使有关这些对象的知识生产合法化。《专业批评》由一系列启发性的文章组成,内容涉及英语研究的历史发展、更广泛的人文学科以及该学科的现状。吉洛里的评价既严肃又诚实;没有必要对形势的严重性进行夸张的描述,也没有必要在认可人文学科尤其是文学研究的价值方面哗众叫好。恰恰相反。令人清醒的是,吉洛里试图为文本研究提供更适度的理由,而不是那些由文学学者的专业变形所导致的理由:对文学批评的目的和影响的夸大,证明它是一种本质上激进的政治活动。尽管这本书似乎引发了所有的绝望,但纪洛里最后对希望的恳求比它清喉咙所显示的更有力。吉洛里并没有为文学批评献上悼词,而是最终提出了一个问题:文学批评应该以什么样的形式向前发展?今天定义文学批评的专业和学术实践应该在文学批评的未来形成中扮演什么样的角色?主要内容包含在最后一章中,其中包含了关于文学研究的基本原理的令人振奋的论点,吉罗伊对这门学科未来的建议的优雅在于它……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Professing Criticism: Essays on the Organization of Literary Study by John Guillory (review)
Reviewed by: Professing Criticism: Essays on the Organization of Literary Study by John Guillory Alejandro Cathey-Cevallos Guillory, John. 2022. Professing Criticism: Essays on the Organization of Literary Study. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press. $105.00 hc. $29.00 sc. 456 pp. As with Cultural Capital: The Problem of Literary Canon Formation (1993), with Professing Criticism: Essays on the Organization of Literary Study (2022) John Guillory has produced a virtuoso display of what scholarship at its most honest, self-aware best can accomplish. This is a book that asks questions everyone working in English and the humanities more broadly should consider. Working from a methodological framework derived from the sociology of professions, Guillory produces a broad sketch of the history of the study of texts—"the oldest kind of organized study in Western History, excepting only rhetoric" (354)—to consider the establishment of the discipline of literary criticism in the United States during the 1920s and '30s, exploring the interrelations between two major historical developments. On the one hand, Guillory asks how criticism overcame earlier disciplinary formations to be institutionalized within the university at the time of the emergence of the modern system of disciplines; on the other, he asks how literary critics as a social group established their main practice—the professing of criticism—as a form of professional discourse. The problem, Guillory holds, lies in the order in which these events took place, inverting the usual sequence, "Literary study became a profession before it became a discipline" (7). [End Page 596] This inversion, Guillory argues, resulted in a good deal of the problems that afflict the discipline in its crestfallen present: namely, uncertainty over its object of study, questions about its relevance in society, and overcompensating bravado about its social role. The book tells the story of how the predecessors of literary criticism—from the millenarian aegis of rhetoric to the short-lived experiments with belles-lettres, philology, and literary history, as well as the theoretical models and methods literary criticism developed for the study of texts—have all played their part in shaping the current organization of literary study as a discourse of knowledge. Simultaneously, he shows how the unresolved tensions left in the wake of this chronology continue to trouble the discipline's understanding of itself, its objects of study, and its aims. From this argument, set in Part I, "radiate the semi-independent studies" (Guillory 2022, 10) on various aspects of the discipline that Guillory presents in Parts II and III and that aim to understand the simultaneous processes of professional formation and deformation he claims have marked literary criticism since its inception as a university discipline. The modern university institutionalizes these forms of knowledge, organizing them into discrete disciplines through the differentiation of its objects and methods, and regulates the practices of intellectual inquiry that legitimize the production of knowledge about these objects. Professing Criticism consists of a series of illuminating essays on these aspects of the historical development of English studies, on the humanities more broadly, and on the current state of the discipline. Guillory is both severe and honest in his assessment; the picture painted is bleak without needing to wax hyperbolic about the gravity of the situation nor grandstanding in ratifying the value of the humanities and of literary study in particular. Quite the contrary. Soberingly, Guillory seeks to provide more modest justifications for the study of texts than those that have resulted from the literary scholar's professional deformation: an overstatement of the aims and impact of literary criticism that justify it as an intrinsically radical political activity. For all the despair the book seems to have elicited, Guillory's final plea for hope is more forceful than its throat-clearing suggests. Instead of presenting a eulogy of the discipline, Guillory ultimately asks what form the discipline should take going forward, and what role the professional and scholarly practices that define literary criticism today ought to play within its future formation. Mostly contained in the final chapter, which consists of a [End Page 597] rousing argument about the rationales for the study of literature, the elegance of Guillory's suggestion for the discipline's future lies in its...
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COLLEGE LITERATURE LITERATURE-
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