Why praise Astaire?
Michael Wood
- Philosophy the Day after Tomorrow by Stanley Cavell
Harvard, 302 pp, £18.95, May 2005, ISBN 0 674 01704 8
The ordinary slips away from us. If we ignore it, we lose it. If we look at it closely, it becomes extraordinary, the way words or names become strange if we keep staring at them. The very notion turns into a baffling riddle. Shall we say that the ordinary doesn’t exist, or that it exists only when we don’t look at it closely? Stanley Cavell has been thinking about the ordinary (although not only about that) for the whole of his philosophical career, and he knows the riddle inside out. But the riddle is not where his interest lies. He doesn’t mind if the world goes strange on us, as long as we keep looking at it, and he is happy to assert ‘the extraordinariness of what we accept as the ordinary’. The question for him is not a linguistic one, and beyond the simple, slippery word is a whole range of human practices crying out for, but not often getting, our attention.
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
[*] Included in Cavell on Film, edited by William Rothman (SUNY, 399 pp., £16.50, July, 0 7914 6432 6).
[†] Harvard, 512 pp., £19.95, June 2004, 0 674 01336 0.
Vol. 27 No. 20 · 20 October 2005 » Michael Wood » Why praise Astaire? (print version)
Pages 14-15 | 2836 words