{"title":"修复性阅读与基督教无政府主义","authors":"Raili Marling, William Marling","doi":"10.1080/10436928.2021.1901200","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Writing by anarchists is particularly resistant to coherent critical reading: they tell us to take their estimates of human nature on faith, but then arrive at radically different political views. This makes them, however, interesting for reparative reading. As Henry David Thoreau wrote in Walden, the difficulty of reading the classics creates a good deal of their value. In this article we take up the confounding final work of one of his heirs, the charismatic American Christian Anarchist Ammon Hennacy (1898-1970). At the outset of reading Hennacy‘s One-Man Revolution in America (1970), we understood that we had to find a position within what Elizabeth Anker and Rita Felski have called the “method wars” between the proponents of critique (Marxist-inspired or poststructuralist) and a diverse field of scholars seeking for more capacious and enchanted modes of engaging with literary texts. The debate in itself is not new – Susan Sontag had already written against interpretation in 1966 – but it has become a focus of intense conversation within literary studies since the 2000s. What has come to be called postcriticism raises important points. Many of the established critical gestures have become predictable and unilluminating, dismantling the text without sufficient attention to its aesthetic qualities and readerly pleasure (Anker & Felski 15–16; Felski, Uses of Literature). The meaningful politics of critical reading have also been lost, because of the formulaic nature of many analyses, and politics are particularly important to the text that we needed to tackle. If politics is reduced to the mere identification of an underlying ideology, without fresh insights about the power of the text to engage and change the reader, the critical gesture loses force. Felski has been especially concerned about the dominant metaphors of depth and distance that make scholars seek hidden layers, to expose the text and thereby to assert their own superiority over it, the author, and the common reader. Different critics have enumerated the shortcomings of critique: negativity, pessimism, vigilance, diagnostic gaze, suspicion. 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In this article we take up the confounding final work of one of his heirs, the charismatic American Christian Anarchist Ammon Hennacy (1898-1970). At the outset of reading Hennacy‘s One-Man Revolution in America (1970), we understood that we had to find a position within what Elizabeth Anker and Rita Felski have called the “method wars” between the proponents of critique (Marxist-inspired or poststructuralist) and a diverse field of scholars seeking for more capacious and enchanted modes of engaging with literary texts. The debate in itself is not new – Susan Sontag had already written against interpretation in 1966 – but it has become a focus of intense conversation within literary studies since the 2000s. What has come to be called postcriticism raises important points. Many of the established critical gestures have become predictable and unilluminating, dismantling the text without sufficient attention to its aesthetic qualities and readerly pleasure (Anker & Felski 15–16; Felski, Uses of Literature). The meaningful politics of critical reading have also been lost, because of the formulaic nature of many analyses, and politics are particularly important to the text that we needed to tackle. If politics is reduced to the mere identification of an underlying ideology, without fresh insights about the power of the text to engage and change the reader, the critical gesture loses force. Felski has been especially concerned about the dominant metaphors of depth and distance that make scholars seek hidden layers, to expose the text and thereby to assert their own superiority over it, the author, and the common reader. Different critics have enumerated the shortcomings of critique: negativity, pessimism, vigilance, diagnostic gaze, suspicion. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
无政府主义者的写作尤其抗拒连贯的批判性阅读:他们告诉我们,要根据信仰来估计人性,但随后会得出截然不同的政治观点。然而,这使得它们对于修复性阅读来说很有趣。正如亨利·大卫·梭罗(Henry David Thoreau)在《瓦尔登湖》(Walden)中所写的那样,阅读经典的困难创造了大量的价值。在这篇文章中,我们讨论了他的继承人之一,魅力非凡的美国基督教无政府主义者Ammon Hennacy(1898-1970)令人困惑的最后作品。在阅读Hennacy的《美国的一个人革命》(1970)之初,我们就明白,我们必须在Elizabeth Anker和Rita Felski所说的批判支持者(受马克思主义启发或后结构主义者)与寻求更广阔、更迷人的文学文本参与模式的不同学者之间的“方法战”中找到一个位置。这场争论本身并不是什么新鲜事——苏珊·桑塔格在1966年就已经写过反对解读的文章——但自2000年代以来,它已经成为文学研究中激烈讨论的焦点。所谓的后批评提出了重要的观点。许多既定的批评姿态已经变得可预测和不突出,在没有充分关注文本的审美品质和阅读乐趣的情况下拆解文本(Anker&Felski 15-16;Felski,《文学的用途》)。由于许多分析的公式化性质,批判性阅读的有意义的政治性也已经丧失,而政治性对我们需要处理的文本尤为重要。如果政治被简化为仅仅是对一种潜在意识形态的认同,而没有对文本吸引和改变读者的力量有新的见解,那么批评姿态就会失去力量。费尔斯基特别关注深度和距离的主要隐喻,这些隐喻使学者们寻找隐藏的层次,揭露文本,从而断言他们自己对文本、作者和普通读者的优越性。不同的评论家列举了批评的缺点:消极、悲观、警惕、诊断性凝视、怀疑。Rita Felski似乎在描述我们对Hennacy反应的某些方面:
Writing by anarchists is particularly resistant to coherent critical reading: they tell us to take their estimates of human nature on faith, but then arrive at radically different political views. This makes them, however, interesting for reparative reading. As Henry David Thoreau wrote in Walden, the difficulty of reading the classics creates a good deal of their value. In this article we take up the confounding final work of one of his heirs, the charismatic American Christian Anarchist Ammon Hennacy (1898-1970). At the outset of reading Hennacy‘s One-Man Revolution in America (1970), we understood that we had to find a position within what Elizabeth Anker and Rita Felski have called the “method wars” between the proponents of critique (Marxist-inspired or poststructuralist) and a diverse field of scholars seeking for more capacious and enchanted modes of engaging with literary texts. The debate in itself is not new – Susan Sontag had already written against interpretation in 1966 – but it has become a focus of intense conversation within literary studies since the 2000s. What has come to be called postcriticism raises important points. Many of the established critical gestures have become predictable and unilluminating, dismantling the text without sufficient attention to its aesthetic qualities and readerly pleasure (Anker & Felski 15–16; Felski, Uses of Literature). The meaningful politics of critical reading have also been lost, because of the formulaic nature of many analyses, and politics are particularly important to the text that we needed to tackle. If politics is reduced to the mere identification of an underlying ideology, without fresh insights about the power of the text to engage and change the reader, the critical gesture loses force. Felski has been especially concerned about the dominant metaphors of depth and distance that make scholars seek hidden layers, to expose the text and thereby to assert their own superiority over it, the author, and the common reader. Different critics have enumerated the shortcomings of critique: negativity, pessimism, vigilance, diagnostic gaze, suspicion. Rita Felski seemed to be describing some aspects of our reaction to Hennacy: