Professional Correctness: Literary Studies and Political Change (Clarendon Lectures in English)
Books / Hardcover
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ISBN: 0198123736 / Publisher: Oxford University Press, January 1996
One of the nation's most controversial scholars challenges both left- and right-wing intellectuals on the subject of "political correctness," arguing that the revolutionary potential of literary theory has no influence over politics outside the university. UP.
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Few literary scholars have won the fame--or notoriety--achieved by Stanley Fish. As a founder of Reader Response Theory, critic of what he calls free speech ideology, and activist chair of the English Department at Duke University, he has become an icon to a new generation of leftist literarycritics--and a demon to right-wing opponents of "tenured radicals," as Roger Kimball called them. How ironic, then, that Fish now makes a powerful case that politics and literary studies don't mix. In Professional Correctness, Stanley Fish challenges both left- and right-wing thinkers by directly attacking the notion that literary studies might engage and influence political issues. All the sniping over politically driven scholarship, he argues, isn't worth the ammunition; given the structureof both politics and the academy, literary scholarship simply will not reach an audience that might convert it into effective political action. Once the boundary between literature and the day's political debates was porous, or even nonexistent. Now, "deprived of a secure if unofficial place in thecorridors of government and commerce," he writes, "literary activity is increasingly pursued in the academy where proficiency is measured by academic standards and rewarded by the gatekeepers of an academic guild." This professionalization has guaranteed a permanent place for students of literature,but it has also taken them out of the political sphere--and activist scholars cannot wish that fact away "by changing the object of one's attention from poems to T.V. shows or by changing the name of the literary enterprise to, say, cultural studies." There are no paths from the academy to politicalpower. By the same token, right-wing attacks on recent trends in literary scholarship are woefully misguided; there is no danger of the cultural studies professoriat working a revolution in America. Fish goes on to argue that academic literary scholars should not try to justify their profession byappealing to some larger goal, but should celebrate and extend the traditions of their craft, extolling the pleasures and challenges handed down by their predecessors. Written with rare grace and incisive wit, Professional Correctness presents Fish at his best: provocative, unpredictable, and full of good sense. It is a book that challenges the profession of literary criticism even as it glories in its pleasures.
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