Description
Book SynopsisWhat is ordinary language criticism? In a series of essays on texts and figures ranging from Genesis to Don Quixote to Proust, Henry James, Martin Heidegger, and Robert Frost, this work sets out to recover ordinariness as the overlooked point of departure and return in literary studies.
Trade ReviewRevolutionary change creates exiles, new qualifications for advancement, new forms of address, new silences. Ordinary language criticism is invoked by the editors as an avenue of liberation from what were felt to be, let's say, conformities to system, ones having the effect of a kind of inhibition... of reading, as though what was felt to be a fetishized response to texts had become transformed into a phobic response. I felt something of the sort of liberation on encountering Wittgenstein and Austin.... - STANLEY CAVELL, FROM THE AFTERWORD
Table of ContentsIntroduction - The Varieties Of Ordinary Language Criticism, Kenneth Dauber And Walter Jost; Wittgenstein's Philosophizing And Literary Theorizing, Austin E. Quigley; Stanley Cavell's Redemptive Reading - A Philosophical Labor In Progress, Edward Duffy; The Window - Knowledge Of Other Minds In Virginia Woolf's ""To The Lighthouse"", Martha C. Nussbaum; Ordinary Language Brought To Grief - ""Home Burial"", Walter Jost; Reading, Writing, Remembering - What Cavell And Heidegger Call Thinking, Stephen Mulhall; The Grammar Of Telling - The Example Of ""Don Quixote"", A.J. Cascardi; The Shadow Of A Magnitude - Quotation As Canonicity In Proust And Beckett, William Flesch; The Self, Reflected - Wittgenstein, Cavell, And The Autobiographical Situation, Garry L. Hagberg; Cavell's Imperfect Perfectionism, Charles Altieri; The Poetics Of Description - Wittgenstein On The Aesthetic, Marjorie Perloff; In Which Henry James Strikes Bedrock, Ralph M. Berry; ""The Accomplishment Of Inhabitation"" - Danto, Cavell, And The Argument Of American Poetry, Gerald L. Bruns. (Part Contents).