The Limits of Critique

The Limits of Critique
Author: Rita Felski
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2015-10-20
Genre: Education
ISBN: 022629403X


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Why do critics feel impelled to unmask and demystify the works that they read? What is the rationale for their conviction that language is always withholding some important truth, that the critic's task is to unearth what is unsaid, naturalized, or repressed? These are the features of critique, a mode of thought that thoroughly dominates academic criticism. In this book, Rita Felski brilliantly exposes critique's more troubling qualities and proposes alternatives to it. Critique, she argues, is not just a method but also a sensibility--one best captured by Paul Ricoeur's phrase "the hermeneutics of suspicion." As the characteristic affect of critique, suspicion, Felski shows, helps us understand critique's seductions and limitations. The questions that Felski poses about critique have implications well beyond intramural debates among literary scholars. Literary studies, says Felski, is facing a legitimation crisis thanks to a sadly depleted language of value that leaves the field struggling to find reasons why students should care about Beowulf or Baudelaire. Why is literature worth bothering with? For Felski, the tendencies to make literary texts the object of suspicious reading or, conversely, impute to them qualities of critique, forecloses too many other possibilities. Felski offers an alternative model that she calls "postcritical reading." Rather than looking behind the text for its hidden causes, conditions, and motives, she suggests that literary scholars place themselves in front of a text, reflecting on what it calls forth and makes possible. Here Felski enlists the work of Bruno Latour to rethink reading as a co-production between actors, rather than an unraveling of manifest meaning, a form of making rather than unmaking. As a scholar with an abiding respect for theory who has long deployed elements of critique in her own work, Felski is able to provide an insider's account of critique's limits and alternatives that will resonate widely in the humanities.


Critique of Journalistic Reason
Language: en
Pages: 272
Authors: Tom Vandeputte
Categories: Philosophy
Type: BOOK - Published: 2020-09-01 - Publisher: Fordham University Press

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An encounter between philosophy and journalism recurs across the modern philosophical tradition. Images of reporters and newspaper readers, messengers and town
The Limits of Critique
Language: en
Pages: 237
Authors: Rita Felski
Categories: Education
Type: BOOK - Published: 2015-10-20 - Publisher: University of Chicago Press

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Why do critics feel impelled to unmask and demystify the works that they read? What is the rationale for their conviction that language is always withholding so
The Value of Critique
Language: en
Pages: 187
Authors: Isabelle Graw
Categories:
Type: BOOK - Published: 2019-07-17 - Publisher: Campus Verlag

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The Value of Critique casts its gaze on the two dominant modes of passing judgment in art--critique and value (or evaluation). The act of critique has long held
A Time for Critique
Language: en
Pages: 369
Authors: Bernard E. Harcourt
Categories: Philosophy
Type: BOOK - Published: 2019-09-10 - Publisher: Columbia University Press

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In a world of political upheaval, rising inequality, catastrophic climate change, and widespread doubt of even the most authoritative sources of information, is
Religion as Critique
Language: en
Pages: 300
Authors: Irfan Ahmad
Categories: Religion
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017-11-20 - Publisher: UNC Press Books

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Irfan Ahmad makes the far-reaching argument that potent systems and modes for self-critique as well as critique of others are inherent in Islam--indeed, critiqu