1. Introduction
Summary
TLDRThe lecture serves as an introduction to a course on literary theory, discussing the meanings of key terms such as 'theory,' 'literature,' and 'introduction.' The professor emphasizes the distinction between theory and practice, noting that theory often involves speculation rather than direct application. He highlights the importance of defining literature and the skepticism that characterizes much of literary theory, referencing influential thinkers like Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud. The lecture also explores the historical context of literary theory and its relationship with literary criticism, noting the shift towards skepticism in the 20th century. The professor plans to delve into the nature of authorship and the reading experience in future lectures, using the children's book 'Tony the Tow Truck' as a case study.
Takeaways
- 📚 The course focuses on literary theory and its key concepts.
- 🔍 Theory is often speculative and may not have immediate applications.
- 🤔 Skepticism is a central theme in literary theory.
- 🖊️ Influential figures include Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud.
- 📖 The relationship between literary theory and criticism is explored.
- 👶 'Tony the Tow Truck' will be used to illustrate applied theory.
Timeline
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The professor introduces the course, emphasizing the importance of understanding the terms 'theory' and 'literature.' He highlights the complexity of the word 'theory,' noting its historical variations in meaning and the distinction between theory and methodology. He suggests that theory often exists in a speculative realm, separate from immediate application, but acknowledges its eventual application to literary texts.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
The professor discusses the course's text, 'Tony the Tow Truck,' explaining its simplicity and the intention to use it as a tool for applying theoretical concepts. He stresses that reading is a complex activity and that theory can enhance our understanding of literature, drawing parallels between theory and philosophy while noting the skepticism inherent in literary theory.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The lecture shifts to defining literature, posing the question of what constitutes literature and how it can be defined. The professor lists various definitions based on form, psychological complexity, and epistemological differences, while acknowledging the skepticism that arises from the difficulty of confining literature to a single definition.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The professor emphasizes the importance of defining literature and explores the causes and effects of literature. He introduces the question of authorship, suggesting that understanding the author is crucial to understanding literature, and hints at the subsequent exploration of the reader's role in literary theory.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
The discussion continues with the exploration of how reading is conducted, introducing the concept of hermeneutics, which deals with interpretation and understanding texts. The professor reflects on the historical context of literary theory, noting its evolution and the importance of recognizing theoretical premises in our understanding of literature.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
The professor contrasts literary theory with literary criticism, highlighting the skepticism present in theory that is often absent in criticism. He discusses the historical emergence of skepticism in the twentieth century, linking it to modern thought and the works of key figures like Descartes, Kant, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud.
- 00:30:00 - 00:39:29
The lecture concludes with a preview of the next session, where the professor will discuss the passages from Henry James and Chekhov, connecting them to the theme of consciousness and agency in literature. He invites students to bring the assigned readings and prepares to delve into the question of authorship.
Mind Map
Video Q&A
What is the main focus of the course?
The course focuses on literary theory, exploring definitions of literature and the relationship between theory and practice.
How does the professor define 'theory'?
Theory is described as a speculative undertaking that may not always have immediate applications.
What is the significance of skepticism in literary theory?
Skepticism is a key characteristic of literary theory, questioning the foundations of knowledge and interpretation.
Who are some influential figures mentioned in the lecture?
The lecture references Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, and their contributions to the skepticism in literary theory.
What is the relationship between literary theory and literary criticism?
Literary theory is concerned with description and analysis, while literary criticism often involves evaluation and appreciation.
What will be discussed in the next lecture?
The next lecture will address the question 'What is an author?' and will include a discussion of the children's book 'Tony the Tow Truck.'
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- 00:00:01Prof: I thought I'd begin today--this
- 00:00:03
- 00:00:04is, by the way, the regular practice.
- 00:00:07This is as close as I get to bulleted Power Point.
- 00:00:11It's all there.
- 00:00:12I ought to have got through those topics by the end of the
- 00:00:16lecture.
- 00:00:17If I don't, not to worry.
- 00:00:19I'll pick up wherever the dotted line emerges in the
- 00:00:23subsequent lecture.
- 00:00:24In any case, I thought I'd begin today by
- 00:00:27making a few remarks about the title of our course because it
- 00:00:31has some big words in it: "theory"
- 00:00:34and "literature," but also
- 00:00:36"introduction."
- 00:00:39I think it's worth saying a word or two about the word
- 00:00:41"introduction" as well.
- 00:00:43Now the word theory has a very complicated etymological
- 00:00:47history that I won't trouble you with.
- 00:00:50The trouble with the etymology of theory and the way in
- 00:00:53which the word has been used traditionally is that sometimes
- 00:00:56it actually means practice,
- 00:00:58and then at other historical periods it means something very
- 00:01:02different from practice, something typically from which
- 00:01:07practice is derived.
- 00:01:09Well, that's the sense of theory that I like to work with,
- 00:01:13and I would pause over it by saying that after all,
- 00:01:16there is a difference and practice and we shouldn't too
- 00:01:19quickly, at least, confuse the terms.
- 00:01:21There's a difference between theory and methodology.
- 00:01:24Yes, it's probably fair enough to say that methodology is
- 00:01:29applied theory, but there's a great danger in
- 00:01:33supposing that every aspect of theory has an immediate
- 00:01:37application.
- 00:01:38Theory is very often a purely speculative undertaking.
- 00:01:44It's an hypothesis about something, the exact nature of
- 00:01:48which one needn't necessarily have in view.
- 00:01:51It's a supposition that whatever the object of theory
- 00:01:55might be, theory itself must--owing to
- 00:01:57whatever intellectual constraints one can imagine--
- 00:02:00be of such and such a form.
- 00:02:03At this level of abstraction, plainly there isn't all that
- 00:02:08much incentive to apply thinking of that kind,
- 00:02:12but on the other hand undoubtedly theory does exist
- 00:02:16for the most part to be applied.
- 00:02:19Very frequently, courses of this kind have a
- 00:02:23text-- Lycidas, The Rime of the
- 00:02:26Ancient Mariner, a short story--and
- 00:02:30then once in a while the disquisition of the lecture will
- 00:02:34pause, the text will be produced,
- 00:02:36and whatever theory has recently been talked about will
- 00:02:40be applied to the text; so that you'll get a
- 00:02:43postcolonial reading of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner--
- 00:02:45something, by the way, which is absolutely
- 00:02:47fascinating and important to do--
- 00:02:49and so on through the course.
- 00:02:52Now I suppose it's my reluctance to get into the
- 00:02:56intricacies of questions having to do with applied theory that
- 00:03:01makes me prefer to keep it simple.
- 00:03:05Our text is a story for toddlers called Tony the Tow
- 00:03:11Truck.
- 00:03:12I've decided not to pass it out today because,
- 00:03:15after all, I want to get it into the right hands!
- 00:03:17You can't read it unless you take the course!--and so I'm
- 00:03:21going to wait a little bit.
- 00:03:23
- 00:03:23We won't come back to it at least for the moment,
- 00:03:27but you see that it's mercifully short,
- 00:03:30and as time passes we will do some rather interesting tricks
- 00:03:35with it.
- 00:03:36We will revert, as others revert to
- 00:03:38Lycidas, to Tony the Tow Truck for
- 00:03:42the purpose of introducing questions of applied theory.
- 00:03:45Now this choice may suggest a certain condescension both
- 00:03:49toward theory and toward literary text,
- 00:03:52which is not at all intended.
- 00:03:54It's much more a question of reminding you that if you can do
- 00:03:58it with this, you can do it with anything;
- 00:04:01but also of reminding you that, after all, reading--reading
- 00:04:07just anything--is a complex and potentially almost unlimited
- 00:04:13activity.
- 00:04:14That's one of the good things that theory teaches us and that
- 00:04:19I hope to be able to get across in the course of our varied
- 00:04:24approaches to Tony the Tow Truck.
- 00:04:28Now theory resembles philosophy perhaps in this:
- 00:04:33that it asks fundamental questions and also at times
- 00:04:38builds systems.
- 00:04:40That is to say, theory has certain ambitions to
- 00:04:43a totalization of what can be thought that resembles or rivals
- 00:04:48philosophy.
- 00:04:49But theory differs from philosophy--
- 00:04:52and this is something that I'm going to be coming back to
- 00:04:56persistingly in the second half of this lecture and many times
- 00:05:00hereafter: theory differs from most philosophy in that it
- 00:05:05involves a certain-- this is by no means
- 00:05:07self-evident, and "Why should this
- 00:05:09be?"
- 00:05:10is one of the questions we're going to be asking--it involves
- 00:05:13a certain skepticism.
- 00:05:14There seems to be a doubt, a variety of doubts,
- 00:05:19about the foundations of what we can think and the basis of
- 00:05:23our opinions, that pervades theory,
- 00:05:26and is seen somehow or another to characterize its history.
- 00:05:30Not all theory that we read in this course is skeptical.
- 00:05:35Some of the most powerful and profound thought that's been
- 00:05:39devoted to the subject of the theory of literature is positive
- 00:05:43in its intentions and in its views,
- 00:05:46but by and large you will happily or unhappily come to
- 00:05:50terms with the fact that much of what you're going to be reading
- 00:05:55this semester is undergirded, or perhaps I should say
- 00:05:59undermined, by this persisting skepticism.
- 00:06:04It's crucial, as I say, and I'm going to be
- 00:06:07coming back to it, but it's just a point I want to
- 00:06:10make in passing about the nature of theory now.
- 00:06:13Turning to the word literature,
- 00:06:15this is not theory of relativity, theory of music,
- 00:06:19or theory of government.
- 00:06:20This is a course in theory of literature, and theory of
- 00:06:25literature shares in common with other kinds of theory the need
- 00:06:30for definition.
- 00:06:31That is to say, maybe the most central and,
- 00:06:34for me, possibly the most fascinating question theory asks
- 00:06:38is--well, what is literature?
- 00:06:40How do we know it when we see it?
- 00:06:43How can we define it?
- 00:06:45Much of what we'll be reading takes up the question "What
- 00:06:48is literature?"
- 00:06:49and provides us with fascinating and always--for the
- 00:06:53moment, I think--enticing definitions.
- 00:06:56There are definitions based on form, circularity,
- 00:06:59symmetry, economy of form, lack of economy of form,
- 00:07:03and repetition.
- 00:07:05There are definitions based on psychological complexity,
- 00:07:09psychological balance, psychological harmony,
- 00:07:12sometimes psychological imbalance and disharmony,
- 00:07:16and there are also definitions which insist that somehow there
- 00:07:20is an epistemological difference between literature and other
- 00:07:25kinds of utterance.
- 00:07:26Whereas most utterances purport to be saying something true
- 00:07:30about the actual state of things in the world,
- 00:07:33literary utterance is under no such obligation,
- 00:07:37the argument goes, and ought properly to be
- 00:07:40understood as fiction-- making it up as opposed to
- 00:07:45referring.
- 00:07:46All right.
- 00:07:47Now all of these definitions have had currency.
- 00:07:49We'll be going over them again and finding them,
- 00:07:53I hope, more fascinating as we learn more about them;
- 00:07:58but at the same time, even as I rattle off this list
- 00:08:02of possibilities, probably you felt in yourself
- 00:08:05an upsurge of skepticism.
- 00:08:07You say, "My goodness.
- 00:08:08I can easily find exceptions to all of those rules.
- 00:08:11It's ridiculous to think that literature could be defined in
- 00:08:15any one of those ways or even in a combination of all of them.
- 00:08:19Literature is many things, a many-splendored thing,"
- 00:08:22you say to yourself, "and it simply cannot be
- 00:08:25confined or trapped within a definition of that kind."
- 00:08:29Well and good, properly ecumenical of you,
- 00:08:33but at the same time it gives rise to a sense that possibly
- 00:08:37after all, literature just isn't anything
- 00:08:40at all: in other words,
- 00:08:42that literature may not be susceptible of definition,
- 00:08:47of any one definition, but it is rather--
- 00:08:50and this is the so-called neo-pragmatist argument--
- 00:08:54but it is rather whatever you think it is or more precisely
- 00:08:59whatever your interpretive community says that it is.
- 00:09:04This isn't really a big problem.
- 00:09:06It's kind of unsettling because we like to know what things are,
- 00:09:09but at the same time it's not really a big problem because as
- 00:09:14long as we know about the fact that a certain notion of
- 00:09:17literature exists in certain communities,
- 00:09:21we can begin to do very interesting work precisely with
- 00:09:24that idea.
- 00:09:25We can say there's a great deal to learn about what people think
- 00:09:31literature is and we can develop very interesting kinds of
- 00:09:36thinking about the variety of ways in which these ideas are
- 00:09:42expressed.
- 00:09:43And so it's not, perhaps, crippling if this is
- 00:09:46the conclusion we reach, but at the same time it's not
- 00:09:49the only possible conclusion.
- 00:09:51The possibility of definition persists.
- 00:09:54Definition is important to us, and we're certainly not going
- 00:09:58to give it short shrift in this course.
- 00:10:01We're going to make every effort to define literature as
- 00:10:06carefully as we can.
- 00:10:08Now in addition to defining literature, literary theory also
- 00:10:12asks questions obviously not unrelated but which open up the
- 00:10:16field somewhat.
- 00:10:17What causes literature and what are the effects of literature?
- 00:10:23In a way, there's a subset of questions that arises from
- 00:10:26those, and as to causes these are,
- 00:10:28of course, what we'll be taking up next
- 00:10:30time: the question "What is an author?"
- 00:10:33That is to say, if something causes literature,
- 00:10:36there must be some sort of authority behind it and
- 00:10:40therefore we find ourselves asking,
- 00:10:43"What is an author?"
- 00:10:45By the same token, if literature has effects,
- 00:10:47it must have effects on someone, and this gives rise to
- 00:10:51the equally interesting and vexing question,
- 00:10:54"What is a reader?"
- 00:10:55Literary theory is very much involved with questions of that
- 00:11:00kind, and organizing those questions
- 00:11:03is basically what rationalizes the structure of our syllabus.
- 00:11:07You'll notice that we move in the syllabus--
- 00:11:10after a couple of introductory talks that I'll mention in a
- 00:11:14minute-- we move from the idea that
- 00:11:17literature is in some sense caused by language to the idea
- 00:11:23that literature is in some sense caused by the human psyche,
- 00:11:29to the idea that literature is in some sense caused by social,
- 00:11:34economic, and historical forces.
- 00:11:37There are corollaries for those ideas in terms of the kinds of
- 00:11:43effects that literature has and what we might imagine ourselves
- 00:11:48to conclude from them.
- 00:11:50Finally, literary theory asks one other important question--
- 00:11:55it asks many, but this is the way at least
- 00:11:57I'm organizing it for today-- it asks one other important
- 00:12:00question, the one with which we will
- 00:12:02actually begin: not so much "What is a
- 00:12:04reader?"
- 00:12:05but "How does reading get done?"
- 00:12:08That is to say, how do we form the conclusion
- 00:12:11that we are interpreting something adequately,
- 00:12:15that we have a basis for the kind of reading that we're
- 00:12:18doing?
- 00:12:19What is the reading experience like?
- 00:12:21How do we meet the text face-to-face?
- 00:12:27How do we put ourselves in touch with the text which may
- 00:12:31after all in a variety of ways be remote from us?
- 00:12:35These are the questions that are asked by what's called
- 00:12:39hermeneutics, a difficult word that we will
- 00:12:42be taking up next week.
- 00:12:44It has to do with the god Hermes who conveyed language to
- 00:12:48man, who was in a certain sense,
- 00:12:49among many other functions, the god of communication,
- 00:12:52and hermeneutics is, after all, obviously about
- 00:12:56communication.
- 00:12:57So hermeneutics will be our first topic, and it attempts to
- 00:13:02answer the last question that I've mentioned which is raised
- 00:13:07by theory of literature.
- 00:13:09All right.
- 00:13:10Now let me pause quickly over the word introduction.
- 00:13:15I first started teaching this course in the late 1970s and 80s
- 00:13:19when literary theory was a thing absolutely of the moment.
- 00:13:24As I told the teaching fellows, I had a colleague in those days
- 00:13:28who looked at me enviously and said he wished he had the black
- 00:13:33leather concession at the door.
- 00:13:35Theory was both hot and cool, and it was something about
- 00:13:40which, following from that, one had not just opinions but
- 00:13:46very, very strong opinions.
- 00:13:48In other words, the teaching fellows I had in
- 00:13:51those days--who knows?
- 00:13:52They may rise up against me in the same way this semester--
- 00:13:55but the teaching fellows I had in those days said,
- 00:13:57"You can't teach an introduction.
- 00:13:59You can't teach a survey.
- 00:14:02You can't say, 'If it's Tuesday,
- 00:14:03it must be Foucault.
- 00:14:05If it's Thursday, it must be Lacan.'
- 00:14:07You can't approach theory that way.
- 00:14:09Theory is important and it's important to know what you
- 00:14:11believe," in other words,
- 00:14:13what the basis of all other possible theory is."I am a
- 00:14:17feminist.
- 00:14:18I'm a Lacanian.
- 00:14:20I am a student of Paul de Man.
- 00:14:23I believe that these are the foundational moments of
- 00:14:26theorizing and that if you're going to teach anything like a
- 00:14:31survey, you've got to derive the rest
- 00:14:33of it from whatever the moment I happen to subscribe to might
- 00:14:36be."
- 00:14:37That's the way it felt to teach theory in those days.
- 00:14:42It was awkward teaching an introduction and probably for
- 00:14:44that reason >
- 00:14:46while I was teaching Lit 300, which was then called Lit Y,
- 00:14:49Paul de Man was teaching Lit Z.
- 00:14:52He was teaching a lecture course nearby,
- 00:14:55not at the same time, which was interpretation as
- 00:15:00practiced by the School of de Man.
- 00:15:04That was Lit Z, and it did indeed imply every
- 00:15:07other form of theory, and it was extremely rigorous
- 00:15:11and interesting, but it wasn't a survey.
- 00:15:15It took for granted, in other words,
- 00:15:17that everything else would derive from the fundamental
- 00:15:21idea; but it didn't for a minute
- 00:15:24think that a whole series of fundamental ideas could share
- 00:15:27space, could be a kind of smorgasbord
- 00:15:30that you could mix and match in a kind of happy-go-lucky,
- 00:15:34eclectic way, which perhaps we will be
- 00:15:37seeming to do from time to time in our introductory course.
- 00:15:41Well, does one feel any nostalgia now for the coolness
- 00:15:45and heat of this moment?
- 00:15:47Yes and no.
- 00:15:49It was fascinating to be--as Wordsworth says,
- 00:15:54"Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive"--
- 00:15:58to be around in those days, but at the same time I think
- 00:16:02it's rather advantageous for us too to be still "in
- 00:16:06theory."
- 00:16:07That is to say we still have views.
- 00:16:10We still have to recognize that what we think derives from this
- 00:16:14or that understanding of theory and these or those theoretical
- 00:16:18principles.
- 00:16:19We have to understand the way in which what we do and say,
- 00:16:23what we write in our papers and articles,
- 00:16:25is grounded in theoretical premises which,
- 00:16:28if we don't come to terms with them,
- 00:16:31we will simply naively reproduce without being fully
- 00:16:34aware of how we're using them and how,
- 00:16:37indeed, they are using us.
- 00:16:39So it is as crucial as ever to understand theory.
- 00:16:43In addition, we have the vantage point of,
- 00:16:47I suppose, what we can now call history.
- 00:16:51Some of what we'll be studying is no longer practiced as that
- 00:16:57which is the absolutely necessary central path to
- 00:17:01methodology.
- 00:17:03Some of what we're studying has had its moment of flourishing,
- 00:17:07has remained influential as a paradigm that shapes other
- 00:17:11paradigms, but is not itself,
- 00:17:14perhaps, today the sole paradigm--
- 00:17:17which gives us the opportunity of historical perspective,
- 00:17:20so that from time to time during the course of the course,
- 00:17:24I'll be trying to say something about why certain theoretical
- 00:17:27issues and ideas pushed themselves into prominence at
- 00:17:31certain historical moments, and that too then can become
- 00:17:35part of our enterprise.
- 00:17:37So an introduction is not only valuable for those of us who
- 00:17:40simply wish to acquire knowledge.
- 00:17:42It's also valuable, I think, in lending an
- 00:17:45additional perspective to the topic of theory and to an
- 00:17:49understanding about how theory is,
- 00:17:51on the one hand and perhaps in a certain sense,
- 00:17:54now an historical topic and is, on the other hand,
- 00:17:59something that we're very much engaged in and still committed
- 00:18:04to: so all that then by way of rationale for teaching an
- 00:18:08introduction to theory.
- 00:18:10All right.
- 00:18:12Now the question, "How does literary theory
- 00:18:16relate to the history of criticism?"
- 00:18:20That is a course that I like to teach, too;
- 00:18:23usually I teach Plato to T.S. Eliot or Plato to
- 00:18:27I.A. Richards or some other important figure in the early
- 00:18:31twentieth century.
- 00:18:33It's a course which is absolutely fascinating in all
- 00:18:37sorts of ways, and it has one very important
- 00:18:40thing in common with literary theory: that is to say,
- 00:18:43literary criticism is, too, perpetually concerned with
- 00:18:48the definition of literature.
- 00:18:50Many of the issues that I raised in talking about defining
- 00:18:55literature are as relevant for literary criticism as they are
- 00:18:59for literary theory, and yet we all instinctively
- 00:19:02know that these are two very different enterprises.
- 00:19:06Literary theory loses something that literary criticism just
- 00:19:11takes for granted.
- 00:19:12Literary theory is not concerned with issues of
- 00:19:17evaluation, and it's not really concerned with concomitant
- 00:19:22issues of appreciation.
- 00:19:25Literary theory just takes those for granted as part of the
- 00:19:31sense experience, as one might say,
- 00:19:34of any reader and prefers, rather, to dwell on questions
- 00:19:39of description, analysis and speculation,
- 00:19:43as I've said.
- 00:19:45So that's what's lost in theory, but what's new in
- 00:19:48theory?
- 00:19:49Here I come to the topic which will occupy most of my attention
- 00:19:52for the remainder of the lecture.
- 00:19:55What's new in theory is the element of skepticism that
- 00:19:59literary criticism by and large--
- 00:20:02which is usually affirming a canon of some sort--
- 00:20:06doesn't reflect.
- 00:20:08Literary theory, as I say, is skeptical about
- 00:20:12the foundations of its subject matter and also,
- 00:20:16in many cases, about the foundations of what
- 00:20:19it itself is doing.
- 00:20:21So the question is: how on earth did this come
- 00:20:24about?
- 00:20:25It's an historical question, as I say, and I want to devote
- 00:20:29the rest of the lecture to it.
- 00:20:31Why should doubt about the veridical or truth-affirming
- 00:20:36possibilities of interpretation be so widespread in the
- 00:20:42twentieth century?
- 00:20:44Now here is a big glop of intellectual history.
- 00:20:48I think the sort of skepticism I mean arises from what one
- 00:20:52might call and what often is called modernity--
- 00:20:55not to be confused with Modernism, an early
- 00:20:57twentieth-century phenomenon, but the history of modern
- 00:21:00thought as it usually derives from the generation of
- 00:21:05Descartes, Shakespeare, and Cervantes.
- 00:21:08Notice something about all of those figures:
- 00:21:11Shakespeare is preoccupied with figures who may or may not be
- 00:21:15crazy.
- 00:21:15Cervantes is preoccupied with a figure who is crazy--we're
- 00:21:20pretty sure of that, but he certainly isn't.
- 00:21:23He takes it for granted that he is the most rational and
- 00:21:28systematic of all thinkers and raises questions about--
- 00:21:33since we all take ourselves to be rational too--
- 00:21:36raises questions about just how we know ourselves not to be
- 00:21:40paranoid delusives like Don Quixote.
- 00:21:42So that can be unsettling when we think of this as happening at
- 00:21:47a certain contemporaneous moment in the history of thought.
- 00:21:52Now Descartes, you remember,
- 00:21:54in his Meditations begins by asking a series of
- 00:21:57questions about how we can know anything,
- 00:22:00and one of the skeptical questions he asks is,
- 00:22:03"Well, might I not be crazy?"
- 00:22:05In other words, Descartes is still thinking
- 00:22:08along these same lines.
- 00:22:09He says, "Well, maybe I've been seized by an
- 00:22:12evil genius of some kind or maybe I'm just crazy."
- 00:22:15Now why--and here is the question--why do we get this
- 00:22:19nervousness about the relationship between what I know
- 00:22:24and how I know it arising at this moment?
- 00:22:27Well, I think it's characterized at least in part
- 00:22:31by what Descartes goes on to say in his Meditations.
- 00:22:35Descartes settles the matter--perhaps somewhat
- 00:22:37sweeping the question of whether he is crazy under the rug
- 00:22:41because I'm still not sure he answers that question--
- 00:22:44but he settles the matter famously by saying,
- 00:22:47"I think.
- 00:22:48Therefore, I am," and furthermore,
- 00:22:49as a concomitant, "I think,
- 00:22:51therefore, all the things that I'm thinking about can be
- 00:22:55understood to exist as well."
- 00:22:57Now the Cartesian Revolution establishes something that is
- 00:23:02absolutely crucial for what we call the Enlightenment of the
- 00:23:06next hundred, hundred and fifty years--in
- 00:23:09other words, the idea that there is a
- 00:23:11distance between the mind and the things that it thinks about,
- 00:23:14but that this distance is a good thing.
- 00:23:17In other words, if you look too closely at a
- 00:23:20picture or if you stand too far away from it you don't see it
- 00:23:24clearly-- it's out of focus--but if you
- 00:23:26achieve just the right distance from it,
- 00:23:29it comes into focus.
- 00:23:31The idea of scientific objectivity,
- 00:23:34the idea that motivates the creation of the great
- 00:23:37Encyclopedia by the figures of the French
- 00:23:40Enlightenment-- this idea all arises out of the
- 00:23:44idea that there is a certain appropriate objective distance
- 00:23:49between the perceiver and the perceived.
- 00:23:52Gradually, however, the idea that this distance is
- 00:23:57not too great begins to erode so that in 1796 Kant,
- 00:24:03who isn't exactly enlisted on the side of the skeptics by most
- 00:24:06of his serious students, nevertheless does say something
- 00:24:10equally famous as that which Descartes said and a good deal
- 00:24:14more disturbing: "We cannot know the thing
- 00:24:18in itself."
- 00:24:20Now as I said, Kant erected such an incredibly
- 00:24:23magnificent scaffolding around the thing in itself--
- 00:24:27that is to say, the variety of ways in which
- 00:24:30although we can't know it, we can sort of triangulate it
- 00:24:33and come to terms with it obliquely--
- 00:24:35that it seems churlish to enlist him on the side of the
- 00:24:39skeptics, but at the same time there's a
- 00:24:42sense of a danger in the distance between subject and
- 00:24:46object that begins to emerge in thinking of this kind.
- 00:24:51Now by 1807, Hegel in The Phenomenology
- 00:24:54of Mind is saying that in recent history and in recent
- 00:24:59developments of consciousness something unfortunate has set
- 00:25:03in.
- 00:25:04We have "unhappy consciousness,"
- 00:25:07unhappy consciousness which is the result of estrangement,
- 00:25:12or Verfremdung, and which drives us too far
- 00:25:15away from the thing that we're looking at.
- 00:25:18We are no longer certain at all of what we're looking at,
- 00:25:22and consciousness, therefore, feels alienated.
- 00:25:26All right.
- 00:25:27So you can already begin to see a development in intellectual
- 00:25:30history that perhaps opens the way to a certain skepticism.
- 00:25:34But the crucial thing hasn't yet happened,
- 00:25:38because after all, in all of these accounts,
- 00:25:41even that of Hegel, there is no doubt about the
- 00:25:44authority of consciousness to think what it thinks.
- 00:25:48It may not clearly think about things, about objects,
- 00:25:52but it has a kind of legitimate basis that generates the sort of
- 00:25:57thinking that it does.
- 00:25:59But then--and here is where I want you to look at the passages
- 00:26:03that I've handed out.
- 00:26:04Here's where three great figures--there are others but
- 00:26:08these are considered the seminal figures--
- 00:26:11begin to raise questions which complicate the whole issue of
- 00:26:15consciousness.
- 00:26:16Their argument is that it's not just that consciousness doesn't
- 00:26:21clearly understand what it's looking at and is therefore
- 00:26:25alienated from it.
- 00:26:27It's also that consciousness is alienated from its own
- 00:26:31underpinnings, that it doesn't have any clear
- 00:26:34sense of where it's coming from any more than what it's looking
- 00:26:38at: in other words, that consciousness is not only
- 00:26:42estranged from the world but that it is in and of itself
- 00:26:46inauthentic.
- 00:26:47So just quickly look at these passages.
- 00:26:50Marx, in the famous argument about commodity fetishism in
- 00:26:54Kapital, is comparing the way in which we
- 00:26:58take the product of human labor and turn it into a commodity by
- 00:27:03saying that it has objective value,
- 00:27:06by saying that we know what its value is in and of itself.
- 00:27:10He compares that with religion.
- 00:27:12The argument is: well, God is a product of human
- 00:27:16labor.
- 00:27:16In other words, it's not a completely
- 00:27:18supercilious argument, sort of "God is brought
- 00:27:21into being the same way objects that we make use of are brought
- 00:27:25into being."
- 00:27:26God is a product of human labor, but then we turn around
- 00:27:30and we say God exists independently and has value
- 00:27:34objectively.
- 00:27:35Marx's argument is that the two forms of belief,
- 00:27:39belief in the objective value of the commodity and belief in
- 00:27:45God, are the same.
- 00:27:47Now whether or not any of this is true, believe me,
- 00:27:50is neither here nor there.
- 00:27:52The point that Marx is making is that consciousness,
- 00:27:59that is to say the way in which we believe things,
- 00:28:02is determined by factors outside its control--
- 00:28:07that is to say in the case of Marx's arguments,
- 00:28:10social, historical and economic factors that determine what we
- 00:28:15think and which in general we call "ideology";
- 00:28:20that is to say, ideology is driven by factors
- 00:28:25beyond the ken of the person who thinks ideologically.
- 00:28:31So you see the problem for consciousness now is not just a
- 00:28:34single problem.
- 00:28:35It's twofold: its inauthentic relationship
- 00:28:38with the things it looks at and also its inauthentic
- 00:28:42relationship with its own underpinnings.
- 00:28:46The argument is exactly the same for Nietzsche,
- 00:28:48only he shifts the ground of attack.
- 00:28:50For Nietzsche, the underpinnings of
- 00:28:53consciousness which make the operations of consciousness
- 00:28:57inauthentic are the nature of language itself.
- 00:29:01That is to say that when we think we're telling the truth
- 00:29:05we're actually using worn-out figures of speech.
- 00:29:08"What then is truth?
- 00:29:11A mobile army of metaphors, metonymies,
- 00:29:15anthropomorphisms--in short, a sum of human relations which
- 00:29:19became poetically and rhetorically intensified,"
- 00:29:22etc., etc., etc., "and are now no longer of
- 00:29:26account as coins but are debased."
- 00:29:29Now that word "now" >
- 00:29:31is very important.
- 00:29:32It suggests that Nietzsche does somehow believe that there's a
- 00:29:35privileged moment in the history of language when perhaps
- 00:29:39language is a truth serum, when it is capable of telling
- 00:29:42the truth, but language has now
- 00:29:45simply become a question of worn-out figures,
- 00:29:48all of which dictates what we believe to be true.
- 00:29:53I speak in a figurative way about the relationship between
- 00:29:59the earth and the sky, and I believe that there's a
- 00:30:04sky god.
- 00:30:05I move from speech to belief because I simply don't believe
- 00:30:09that I'm using figures of speech.
- 00:30:11All of this is implied in Nietzsche's argument.
- 00:30:14In other words, language, the nature of
- 00:30:16language, and the way language is
- 00:30:19received by us, in turn determines what we can
- 00:30:23do with it, which is to say it determines
- 00:30:25what we think, so that for Nietzsche the
- 00:30:29distortion of truth-- that is to say the distortion
- 00:30:33of the power to observe in consciousness--
- 00:30:36has as its underlying cause language,
- 00:30:40the state of language, the status of language.
- 00:30:43Freud finally argues for exactly the same relationship
- 00:30:47between consciousness-- that is to say,
- 00:30:50what I think I am thinking from minute to minute--
- 00:30:54and the unconscious, which perpetually in one way or
- 00:30:58another unsettles what I'm thinking and saying from minute
- 00:31:02to minute.
- 00:31:03You know that in The Psychopathology of Everyday
- 00:31:05Life, Freud reminded us that the
- 00:31:08Freudian slip isn't something that happens just sometimes--
- 00:31:11and nobody knows this better than an ad libbing lecturer--
- 00:31:14;it's something that happens all the time.
- 00:31:17The Freudian slip is something that one lives with simply as a
- 00:31:22phenomenon of the slippage of consciousness under the
- 00:31:27influence of the unconscious.
- 00:31:29Now in the passage I gave you, Freud says a very interesting
- 00:31:33thing, which is that after all,
- 00:31:35we have absolutely no objective evidence that the unconscious
- 00:31:39exists.
- 00:31:39If I could see the unconscious, it'd be conscious.
- 00:31:44Right.
- 00:31:44The unconscious, Freud is saying,
- 00:31:47is something that we have to infer from the way consciousness
- 00:31:51operates.
- 00:31:52We've got to infer something.
- 00:31:54We've got to figure out somehow how it is that consciousness is
- 00:31:58never completely uninhibited, never completely does and says
- 00:32:02what it wants to say.
- 00:32:04So the spin on consciousness for Freud is the unconscious.
- 00:32:10Now someone who didn't fully believe Marx,
- 00:32:14Nietzsche and Freud, a very important modern
- 00:32:17philosopher in the hermeneutic tradition named Paul Ricoeur,
- 00:32:21famously said in the fourth passage on your sheet that these
- 00:32:26great precursors of modern thought--
- 00:32:29and particularly, I would immediately add,
- 00:32:31of modern literary theory--together dominate a
- 00:32:36"school of suspicion."
- 00:32:40There is in other words in Ricoeur's view a hermeneutics of
- 00:32:44suspicion, and "skepticism"
- 00:32:47or "suspicion" is a word that can also be
- 00:32:51appropriated perhaps more rigorously for philosophy as
- 00:32:55negativity.
- 00:32:56That is to say, whatever seems manifest or
- 00:33:00obvious or patent in what we are looking at is undermined for
- 00:33:05this kind of mind by a negation which is counterintuitive:
- 00:33:10that is to say, which would seem not just to
- 00:33:14qualify what we understand ourselves to be looking at but
- 00:33:18to undermine it altogether.
- 00:33:21And these tendencies in the way in which Marx,
- 00:33:23Nietzsche and Freud have been received have been tremendously
- 00:33:26influential.
- 00:33:27When we read Foucault's "What is an
- 00:33:29Author?" next time we'll return to this question of
- 00:33:32how Marx, Nietzsche and Freud have been
- 00:33:35received and what we should make of that in view of Foucault's
- 00:33:38idea that-- well, not that there's no such
- 00:33:41thing as an author but that it's rather dangerous to believe that
- 00:33:46there are authors.
- 00:33:48So if it's dangerous to believe that there are authors,
- 00:33:49what about Marx, Nietzsche and Freud?
- 00:33:50Foucault confronts this question in "What is an
- 00:33:53Author?" and gives us some interesting results of
- 00:33:56his thinking.
- 00:33:57For us, the aftermath even precisely of the passages I have
- 00:34:04just quoted, but certainly of the oeuvre
- 00:34:09of the three authors I have quoted from,
- 00:34:12can to a large degree be understood as accounting for our
- 00:34:18topic-- the phenomenon of literary
- 00:34:21theory as we study it.
- 00:34:23In other words, literary theory,
- 00:34:24because of the influence of these figures,
- 00:34:27is to a considerable degree a hermeneutics of suspicion
- 00:34:33recognized as such both by its proponents and famously--
- 00:34:39I think this is perhaps what is historically remote for you--
- 00:34:43by its enemies.
- 00:34:45During the same period when I was first teaching this course,
- 00:34:48a veritable six-foot shelf of diatribes against literary
- 00:34:53theory was being written in the public sphere.
- 00:34:57You can take or leave literary theory,
- 00:35:02fine, but the idea that there would be such an incredible
- 00:35:06outcry against it was one of the most fascinating results of it.
- 00:35:10That is to say for many, many, many people literary
- 00:35:14theory had something to do with the end of civilization as we
- 00:35:18know it.
- 00:35:19That's one of the things that seems rather strange to us today
- 00:35:24from an historical perspective: that the undermining of
- 00:35:29foundational knowledge which seemed to be part and parcel of
- 00:35:34so much that went on in literary theory was seen as the central
- 00:35:39crucial threat to rationality emanating from the academy and
- 00:35:45was attacked in those terms in, as I say, at least six feet of
- 00:35:51lively polemics.
- 00:35:53All of that is the legacy of literary theory,
- 00:35:57and as I say, it arises in part from the
- 00:36:01element of skepticism that I thought it best to emphasize
- 00:36:06today.
- 00:36:07Now I think that one thing Ricoeur leaves out,
- 00:36:12and something that we can anticipate as becoming more and
- 00:36:16more important for literary theory and other kinds of theory
- 00:36:20in the twenty-first century, is Darwin.
- 00:36:24That is to say, it strikes me that Darwin could
- 00:36:28very easily be considered a fourth hermeneut of suspicion.
- 00:36:34Of course, Darwin was not interested in suspicion but he
- 00:36:37was certainly the founder of ways of thinking about
- 00:36:41consciousness that are determined,
- 00:36:44socio-biologically determined: determined in the realm of
- 00:36:48cognitive science, determined as artificial
- 00:36:51intelligence, and so on.
- 00:36:53All of this is Darwinian thinking and,
- 00:36:56I think, increasingly will be central in importance in the
- 00:37:00twenty-first century.
- 00:37:02What will alter the shape of literary theory as it was known
- 00:37:08and studied in the twentieth century is,
- 00:37:12I think, an increasing emphasis on cognitive science and
- 00:37:16socio-biological approaches both to literature and to
- 00:37:20interpretive processes that will derive from Darwin in the same
- 00:37:24way that strands of thinking of the twentieth century derive
- 00:37:28from the three figures that I've mentioned.
- 00:37:32But what all this gives rise to--and this brings me finally
- 00:37:37to the passages which you have on both sides of your sheet and
- 00:37:41which I don't want to take up today but just to preview--
- 00:37:46the passages from Henry James' Ambassadors from 1903,
- 00:37:50and from Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard from
- 00:37:531904.
- 00:37:53In other words, I am at pains to remind you
- 00:37:56that this is a specific historical moment in which,
- 00:38:00in a variety of ways, in each case the speaker argues
- 00:38:04that consciousness-- that is to say,
- 00:38:07the feeling of being alive and being someone acting in the
- 00:38:11world-- no longer involves agency:
- 00:38:14the feeling that somehow to be conscious has become to be a
- 00:38:21puppet, that there is a limitation on
- 00:38:25what we can do, imposed by the idea that
- 00:38:30consciousness is determined in ways that we cannot control and
- 00:38:35cannot get the better of, so that Strether in The
- 00:38:40Ambassadors and Yepihodov in The Cherry Orchard speak
- 00:38:45for a point of view which is a kind of partially well-informed
- 00:38:50gloom and doom that could be understood to anticipate texts
- 00:38:54that are much better informed, that we will be considering but
- 00:39:00nevertheless are especially important as an aspect of their
- 00:39:04historical moment.
- 00:39:06I want to begin the next lecture by taking up those
- 00:39:09passages.
- 00:39:10Please do bring them, and I will also be passing
- 00:39:13around Tony the Tow Truck and I'll give you a brief
- 00:39:17description of what the little children's book actually looks
- 00:39:21like, and then we will plunge in to
- 00:39:24the question "What is an author?"
- 00:39:26So I'll see you on Thursday.
- literary theory
- skepticism
- definition of literature
- theory vs practice
- historical context
- Marx
- Nietzsche
- Freud
- literary criticism
- authorship