Who can blame him?
Frank Kermode
- Critical Terms for Literary Study edited by Frank Lentricchia and Thomas McLaughlin
Chicago, 369 pp, £35.95, March 1990, ISBN 0 226 47201 9 - The Ideology of the Aesthetic by Terry Eagleton
Blackwell, 426 pp, £35.00, February 1990, ISBN 0 631 16302 6
‘Something is happening to the way we think,’ said Clifford Geertz in 1980, and Stanley Fish is right to add that Geertz was partly responsible for the shift. But Fish, in a bold essay on rhetoric included in the Lentricchia-McLaughlin volume, qualifies Geertz’s remark: ‘something,’ he adds, ‘is always happening to the way we think.’ For he doesn’t quite agree with people who claim to have overthrown ‘the rival epistemology’, wiped out ‘foundationalism’, disposed once and for all of ‘essentialist’ thinking. Deploying new rhetorical, deconstructive and semiological tools, they believe they have taken apart all the assumptions by which we – imagining ourselves to be independent individuals in a world we knew roughly how to know – imagined we could deal justly or sensibly with the problems of literature, society and our own lives. They say we must now learn to think about these matters in entirely new ways.
You are not Logged In
- If you have already registered login here
- If you are a print subscriber using the site for the first time please register here
- If you are not yet a subscriber you can subscribe here
- If you are a member of a subscribing institution or University library please login here
- If you have an Institutional print subscription and online access is not included, find out about our Institutional online subscriptions
Vol. 12 No. 7 · 5 April 1990 » Frank Kermode » Who can blame him? (print version)
Pages 14-15 | 2943 words