all right now I thought I'd begin today uh this is by the way a regular practice um this is as close as I get to bulleted PowerPoint uh it's all there uh I ought to have got through those Topics by the end of the lecture if I don't not to worry I'll pick up wherever the dotted line emerges uh in the subsequent lecture but in any case I thought I'd begin today by making a few remarks about the title of our course uh because it has some big words in it Theory and literature but also
introduction I think it's worth saying a word or two about the word introduction as well uh now theory has a very complicated eological history that I won't trouble you with uh the trouble with the atmology of theory and the way in which the word has been used traditionally is that sometimes it actually means practice and then uh at other historical periods it means uh something very different from practice something typically from which practice is derived well that's the sense of theory that I I like to work with um and I would pause over it by
saying that after all there is a difference and we and we shouldn't too quickly at least confuse the terms there's a difference between Theory and methodology yes it's probably fair enough to say that methodology is applied Theory um but there's a great danger in supposing that every aspect of theory has an immediate application theory is very often a purely speculative undertaking uh it's an hypothesis about something the exact nature of which one needn't necessarily have in view it's a supposition that uh whatever the object of theory might be it must owing to whatever intellectual constraints
one can imagine be of such a form and at this level of abstraction plainly um there isn't all that much uh incentive to apply thinking of that kind but on the other hand undoubtedly Theory does exist for the most part to be applied very frequently courses of this kind um have a text uh litus the rhyme of the Ancient Mariner a short story and then once in a while the disquisition of the lecture will pause the text will be produced and whatever theory has recently been talked about will be applied to the text so that
you'll get a postc colonial reading of the rhyme of the Ancient Mariner something by the way which is absolutely fascinating and important to do uh and uh so on through the course now I suppose it's my uh reluctance um to get into the intricacies of question question having to do with applied theory that makes me prefer to keep it simple our text is a story for toddlers called Tony the tow truck I've decided not to pass it out today because after all I want to get it into the right hands you can't read it unless
you take the course uh and and so you know I'm going to wait a little bit we don't we don't come back to it at least for the moment and uh but you see that it's mercifully short um and as time passes we will do uh some rather interesting tricks with it we will revert as others revert to litus to Tony the tow truck for the purpose of introducing questions of Applied Theory now this may suggest a certain condescension both toward Theory and toward literary texts uh which is not at all intended it's much more
a question of reminding that reminding you that if you can do it with this you can do it with anything uh but also of reminding you that after all reading reading just anything um is a complex and potentially almost unlimited activity that's one of the good things uh that theory teaches us and that I hope to be able to get across uh in our in the in the course of our of of of our varied approaches to Tony the tow truck now Theory resembles philosophy perhaps in this that it asks fundamental questions and and also
at times builds systems that is to say theory has certain Ambitions to a totalization of what can be thought uh that resembles or Rivals philosophy but Theory differs from philosophy and this is something that I'm going to be coming back to uh persisting in the SE in the second half of this lecture and many times Hereafter Theory differs from most philosophy in that it involves a certain and this is by no means self-evident why should this be is one of the questions we're going to be asking it involves a certain skepticism there seems to be
a doubt a a variety of doubts about the foundations of what we can think about the basis of our opinions that pervades theory uh seems somehow or another to characterize its history now not all theory that we read in this course is skeptical uh some of the most powerful and profound thought that's been devoted to uh the subject of theory of literature uh is positive uh in its intentions and in its views but by and large you will uh happily or unhappily uh come to terms with the fact that much of what you're going to
be reading this semester is under gted or perhaps I should say undermined uh by this persisting skepticism it's crucial as I say and I'm going to be come back coming back to it but it's just a point I want to make in passing about the nature of theory now turning to the word literature this is not theory of relativity theory of music theory of government this is of course in theory of literature and theory of literature shares in common with other kinds of literature other kinds of theory uh the need for definition that is to
say maybe the most Central and for me and for me possibly the most fascinating question Theory asks is well what is literature how do we know it when we see it how can we Define it now much of what we'll be reading takes up the question what is literature and provides us with fascinating uh and always for the moment I think enticing definitions there are definitions based on form circul ity symmetry economy of form lack of economy of form repetition there are definitions based on psychological complexity psychological balance psychological Harmony sometimes psychological imbalance and disharmony
and there are also there are also definitions which which insist that somehow there's an epistemological difference between literature and other kinds of utterance whereas most utterances purport to be saying something true about the actual state of things in the world uh literary utterance is under no such obligation the argument goes and ought properly to be understood as fiction making it up as opposed to referring all right now all of these definitions have had currency we'll be going over them again uh and I and and and finding them I hope more fascinating as we learn more
about them but at the same time time even as I rattle off this list of possibilities probably you felt yourself an upsurge of skepticism you said my goodness I can easily find exceptions to all those rules it's ridiculous to think that literature could be defined in any one of those ways or even in a combination of all of them literature is many things a many Splendid thing you say to yourself and it simply cannot be confined or trapped within a definition of that kind well and good properly ecumenical of you but at the same time
it gives rise to a sense that possibly after all literature just isn't anything at all in other words that literature may not be suceptible of definition of any one definition but it is rather and this is the so-called Neo pragmatist argument but it is rather whatever you think it is or more precisely whatever your interpretive Community says that it is and this isn't really a big problem it's kind of unsettling because we like to know what things are but at the same time it's not really a big problem because as long as we know about
the fact that L that a certain notion of literature exists in certain communities we can begin to do very interesting work precisely with that idea and we can say there's a great deal to learn about what people think literature is and we can develop very interesting kinds of thinking uh about the variety of ways in which these uh in which these ideas are are expressed and so it's not perhaps crippling if this is the conclusion we reach but at the same time it's not the only possible conclusion possibility of definition persists uh definition is important
to us and we're certainly not going to give it short shrift in this course we're going to make every effort uh to Define literature uh as carefully as we can now in addition to defining literature literary Theory also asks questions obviously not unrelated but which open up the field somewhat what causes literature and what are the effects of literature and in a way there's a subset of questions that arises from those to the effect and this is of course what we'll be taking up next time the question what is an author that is to say
if something causes literature um there must be some sort of authority behind it uh and therefore we find ourselves asking what is an author and by the same token if literature has effects it must have effects on someone and this gives rise to the equally interesting and vexing question what is a reader and literary theory is very much involved with questions of that kind uh and organizing those questions is basically what rationalizes the structure of our syllabus you'll notice that we move in the syllabus after a couple of introductory uh talks that I'll be that
I'll mention in a minute we move in the syllabus from the idea that literature is in some sense caused by language to the idea that literature is in some sense caused by the human psyche to the idea that literature is in some sense caused by social economic and historical forces and there are corollaries uh for th for those ideas in terms of the kinds of effects that literature has and what we uh might imagine ourselves to conclude from them and finally literary Theory asks one other important question asks many but this is the way at
least I'm organizing it for today it asks ask one other important question the one with which we will actually begin not so much what is a reader but how does reading get done that is to say how do we form the conclusion that we are interpreting something adequately that we have a basis for the kind of reading that we're doing what is the reading experience like uh how do we meet the text face to face how do we put ourselves into touch with the text which may after all in a variety of ways be remote
from us now these are the questions that are asked by what's called hermeneutics uh a difficult word that we will be taking up next week um it has to do with the God Hermes who conveyed language to man in a certain sense among many other functions the god of communication uh and it is after all obviously uh about communication so hermeneutics will be our first topic and it's and it attempts to answer uh the last question that I'll mention which is raised by Theory of literature all right now let me pause quickly over the word
introduction I first started teaching this course in the late 70s and 80s when literary theory was a thing absolutely of the moment uh as I told the teaching fellows um I had a colleague in those days who looked at me enviously and said he wished he had the black leather concession at the door theory was both hot and cool and it was something about which following from that one had not just opinions but very very strong opinions in other words the teaching fellows I had in those days who knows they may rise up against me
in the same way this semester but the teaching fellows I had in those days said you can't teach an introduction you can't teach a survey you can't say if it's Tuesday it must be Fuko if it's if it's Thursday it must be Lon you can't approach theory that way theory is important and it's important to know what you believe in other words what the basis of all other possible theory is I'm a feminist I'm a leanian I'm a student of Paul Dean I believe that these are the foundational moments of theory izing and that if
you're going to teach anything like a survey you've got to derive the rest of it from whatever the moment I happened to subscribe to might be right that's the way it felt to teach theory in those days it was awkward teaching an introduction and probably for that reason while I was teaching lit 300 which was called lit y Paul Dean was teaching lit Z he was he was teaching a lecture course nearby uh not at the same time uh which was interpretation as practiced by the school of the man that was lit Z and it
did indeed apply imply every other form of theory uh and it was extremely rigorous and interesting but it wasn't a survey it took for granted in other words that everything else would derive from the fundamental idea but it didn't for a minute think that a whole series of fundamental ideas could share space could be a kind of smorgus board that you could mix and match in in a kind of happy go go-lucky eclectic way which perhaps we will be seeming to do from time to time in our introductory course well now do one does one
feel any Nostalgia for the coolness and heat of this moment yes and no uh it was fascinating to be uh as woodsworth says Bliss was it in that Dawn to be alive it was fascinating uh to be around in those days but at the same time I think it's rather advantageous for us to be still in theory that is to say we still have views we still have to recognize that what we think derives from this or that understanding of theory and these or those theoretical principles and we have to understand the way in which
what we do in say what we write in our papers and articles is grounded in theoretical premises which if we don't come to terms with them we will simply naively reproduce without being fully aware of how we're using them and how indeed they're using us and so it is uh as crucial as ever to understand Theory at the same time we have the vantage point of I suppose what we can now call history some of what we'll be studying is no longer practiced as that which is the absolute abolutely necessary Central path to methodology some
of what we're studying has had its moment of flourishing has remained influential as a paradigm that shapes other paradigms but is not itself perhaps today the Paradigm which gives us the opportunity of historical perspective so that from time to time during the course of the course I'll be trying to say something about why certain theoretical issues and ideas pushed themselves into prominent at certain historical moments and that too then can become part of our Enterprise so an introduction is not only valuable for those of us who simply wish to acquire knowledge it's also valuable I
think in lending an additional perspective to the topic of theory and to an understanding about how theory is on the one hand perhaps in a certain sense now uh an historical topic and is on the other hand something that we're very much engaged in and still committed to so all that then by way of rationale for teaching and introduction to Theory all right now the question how does the history of uh how does literary Theory relate to the history of criticism now this is a course that I like to teach to uh usually teach it
Plato to TSL it or Plato to Richards or some sort of important figure in the early 20th century uh and it's a course uh which is absolutely fascinating in all sorts of ways and it has one very important thing in common with literary theory that is to say literary criticism is too perpetually concerned with the definition of literature many of the issues that I raised in talking about defining literature are as relevant for literary criticism as they are for literary Theory and yet we all instinctively know that these are two very different Enterprises literary Theory
loses something that literary criticism just takes for granted literary theory is not concerned with issues of evaluation and it's not really concerned with concominant issues of appreciation literary Theory just takes those for granted as part of the the sense experience as one might say uh of any reader and prefers rather to dwell on questions of description analysis and speculation as I've said now that's what's lost in theory but what's new in theory and here I come to the topic which will occupy most of my attention for the remainder of the lecture what's new in theory
is the element of skepticism that literary criticism by and large which is usually affirming a cannon of some sort uh doesn't reflect literary Theory as I say is skeptical about the foundations of its subject matter and also in many cases about the foundations of what it itself is doing so the question is how on Earth did this come about it's an historical question as I say and and I want to devote the rest of the lecture to it why should doubt about the veridical or truth affirming possibilities of interpretation be so widespread in the 20th
century now here a big goop of intellectual history I think it arises from what one might call and what often is called modernity not to be confused with modernism in early 20th century phenomenon but a the history of modern thought as it usually derives from the generation of dayart Shakespeare cantes notice something about all of those figures Shakespeare uh is preoccupied with figures who may or may not be crazy santus is preoccupied with a figure who is crazy we're pretty sure of that but he certainly isn't he takes it for granted that he is the
most rational and systematic of of of all thinkers and raises questions about since we all take ourselves to be rational too raises questions about just how we know ourselves not to be paranoid delusive like Don kote and so that too can be unsettling when we think of this H as happening at a certain contempor contemporaneous moment uh in the history of thought now dayart you remember in his meditations Begins by asking a serious a ser series of questions about how we can know anything and one of the skeptical questions he asks is well might I
not be crazy in other words deart is still thinking along these same lines he says well maybe I've been seized by an evil Genius of some kind or maybe I'm just crazy now why and here's the question why do we get this nervousness about the relationship between what I know and how I know it arising at this moment well I think it's characterized at least in part by what dayart goes on to say in his meditations dayart settles the matter uh perhaps somewhat sweeping the question whether uh uh he's crazy under the rug because I'm
still not sure he answers that question uh but he settles the ma the matter famously by saying I think therefore I am and furthermore as a concominant I think therefore all the things that I'm thinking about can be understood uh to exist as well now now the cartisian revolution uh establishes something that is absolutely crucial for what we call the enlightenment of the next 10050 years in other words the idea that there is a distance between the mind and the things that it thinks about but that this distance is a good thing in other words
if you look too closely at a picture or if you stand too far away from it you don't see it clearly it's out of focus but if you achieve just the right distance from it it comes into focus and the idea of scientific OB objectivity the idea that motivates the creation of the great Encyclopedia by the figures of the French Enlightenment this idea all arises out of the idea that there is a certain appropriate objective distance between the perceiver and the perceived gradually however the idea that this distance is not too great begins to erode
so that in 1796 Kant who isn't exactly enlisted on the side of the Skeptics by most of his serious students nevertheless does say something equally famous as that that as that which day Kart said and uh a good deal more disturbing we cannot know the thing in itself now as I say k erected such an incredibly magnificent scaffolding around the thing in itself that is to say the variety of ways in which although we can't know it we can sort of triangulate it and come to terms with it obliquely that it seems chish to enlist
him on the side of the Skeptics but at the same time there's a sense of a danger in the distance between subject and object that begins to emerge in thinking of this kind Now by 1807 Hegel in the phenomenology of mind is saying that in recent history and in recent developments of Consciousness something unfortunate has set in we have unhappy Consciousness unhappy Consciousness which is the result of estrangement and which drives us too far away from the thing that we're looking at we are no longer certain at all of what we're looking at and Consciousness
therefore feels alienated all right so you can already be begin to see a development in intellectual history that perhaps opens the way to a certain skepticism but the crucial thing hasn't yet happened because after all in all these accounts even that of Hegel there's no doubt about the authority of Consciousness to think what it thinks it may not clearly think about things about objects but it has a kind of legitimate basis that that generates the the sort of thinking that it does but then and here's where I want you to look at the passages that
I've handed out here's where uh three great figures there are others but these are considered the seminal figures begin to raise questions which complicate the whole issue of Consciousness their argument is it's not just that Consciousness doesn't clearly understand what it's looking at it's also and and is therefore alienated from it it's also that Consciousness is alienated from its own underpinnings that it doesn't have any clear sense of where it's coming from anymore than what it's looking at in other words that Consciousness is not only aranged from the world but that it is in and
of itself inauthentic so just quickly look at these passages Marx is uh in the famous argument about commodity fetishism and capital is comparing the way in which we take the product of human labor and turn it into a commodity by saying that it has objective value by saying that we know what its value is in and of itself he Compares that with religion the argument is well God is a product of human labor in other words it's not a completely supercilious argument you know I mean sort of God is brought into being the same way
objects that we make use of are brought into being God is a product of human labor but then we turn around and we say God exists and has value objectively Marx's argument is that the two forms of belief belief in the objective value of the commodity and belief in God are the same now whether or not any of this is true believe me is neither here nor there the point that Marx is making the point that Marx is making is that that Consciousness that is to say the way in which we believe things is determined
by factors outside its control that is to say in the case of Marx's arguments social historical and economic factors that determine what we think and and and which in general we call ideology that is to say ideology is driven by factors beyond the Ken of the person who thinks IDE ideologically so you see the problem for Consciousness now is not just a single problem it's twofold it's it's inauthentic relationship with the things it looks at and also its inauthentic relationship with its own underpinnings the argument is exactly the same for n Only He shifts the
ground of attack for Nicha the underpinnings of Consciousness which make the operations of Consciousness in inauthentic uh are the nature of language itself that is to say that when we think we're telling the truth we're actually using worn out figures of speech what then is truth a mobile Army of metaphors bonies anthropomorphisms in short a sum of human relations which became poetically and rhetorically intensified uh etc etc etc and now no longer and and are now no longer of account as coins but are debase now that word now is very important it suggests that n
does somehow believe that there's a privileged moment in the history of language when perhaps language is a truth serum when it is capable of telling the truth but language has now Simply Be become a question of worn out figures all of which dictates what we believe to be true I speak uh of you know I I I I speak uh in a figurative way about the relationship between the Earth and the sky um and I believe that there's a sky God I I speak because I simply don't believe that I'm using figures of speech all
of this is implied in n's argument in other words language the nature of language the the way language is received by us in turn determines what we can do with it which is to say determines what we think so that is so that for Nicha the Distortion of truth that is to say the Distortion of the power to observe in Consciousness has as its underlying cause language the state of language the status of language Freud finally argues for exactly the same relationship between Consciousness that is to say what I think I am thinking from minute
to minute and the unconscious which perpetually in in one way or another unsettles what I'm thinking and saying from minute to minute you know that in the Psychopathology of everyday life uh Freud reminded us that the Freudian slip isn't something that happens just sometimes and nobody knows better those knows this better than a lecturer it's something that happens all the time and the and and the fre the Freudian slip is something that one lives with simply as a phenomenon of the slippage of Consciousness under the influence of the unconscious now in the passage I gave
you Freud says a very interesting thing which is that after all we have absolutely no uh objective evidence that the unconscious exists you know I mean the unconscious if I could see the unconscious it' be conscious right the unconscious what Freud is saying is something that we have to infer from the way Consciousness operates we've got to infer something we've got to figure out somehow how it is that Consciousness is never completely inhibited never completely does and says what it wants to say so the spin on Consciousness for Freud is the unconscious now someone who
didn't fully believe Marx nche and Freud a very important modern philosopher in the hermeneutic tradition named Paul rur famously said in the first passage on your sheet that these great precursor of modern thought and particularly I would immediately add of modern literary Theory together dominate a school of Suspicion there is in other words in R's view a hermeneutics of Suspicion and skepticism or suspicion is a word that can also be appropriated perhaps more rigorously for philosophy as negativity that is to say whatever seems manifest or obvious or patent in what we're looking at is undermined
for this kind of Mind by a negation which is counterintuitive that is to say which would seem uh not just not just to qualify what we understand ourselves to be looking at but to undermine it Al together and these tendencies in the way in which Marx nature and Freud have been received and when we read fuko's what is an author next time we'll return to this question of how Marx n and Freud have been received and what we should make of that in view of fuko's idea that there's well you know not that there's no
such thing as an author but that it's rather dangerous to believe that there are authors well if it's dangerous to believe that there are authors what about Marx NE and Freud Fuko confronts uh this question in what is an author uh and gives us some interesting results of it is thinking uh for us the aftermath uh partic even precisely of the passages I've just quoted but certainly of the IR of the three uh authors I've quoted from uh can it to a large degree be understood as accounting for the topic the phenomenon of literary Theory
as we study it in other words literary Theory because of the influence of these figures uh is uh to a considerable degree a hermeneutics of Suspicion recognized as such both by its uh proponents and famously I think uh this is perhaps what is historical for you uh by its enemies during the same period when I was first teaching this course um a veritable sixf foot shelf of diet tribes against literary theory was being written in the public sphere there was the most UN I mean you can you can take or leave literary Theory fine but
the idea that there would be such an incredible outcry against it was one of the most fascinating results of it that is to say for many many many people literary Theory had something to do with the end of civilization as we know it that's one of the things that seems rather strange to us today from an historical perspective but the found undermining of foundational knowledge which seemed to be part and parcel of so much that went on in literary theory was seen as the central crucial threat to rationality emanating from the academy and was attacked
uh in those in in those terms in as I say at least six feet of lively polemics uh all of that is the legacy of literary Theory and as I say uh it arises in part from this element of skepticism that I've thought it uh that I've thought it best to emphasize today now I think that excuse me one thing RAR leaves out and something that will that that we can anticipate as becoming more and more important for literary Theory and other kinds of theory in the 20th century is Darwin that is to say it
strikes me Darwin could very easily be considered uh a fourth hermene of Suspicion of course Dar Darwin was not interested in suspicion but he was certainly the founder of ways of thinking about Consciousness that are determined socio biologically determined determined in in the realm of cognitive science determined as artificial intelligence and so on all of this is darwinian thinking and I think think increasingly will be Central in importance in the 21st century what what what will alter the the shape of literary Theory as it was known and studied in the 20th century is I think
an increasing emphasis on cognitive science and sociobiological approaches both to literature and to interpretive processes uh that uh will derive from Darwin in the same way that strands of thinking of the 20th century derived from the three figures that I've mentioned but what all this gives rise to and this brings me finally to the passages which you have on both sides of your sheet and which I don't want to take up today but just to preview the passage is from James ambassadors 1903 and from check offs the Cherry Orchard 1904 in other words I'm at
pains to remind you that this this is a specific historical moment in which in a variety of ways the speaker argues that Consciousness that is to say the feeling of being alive and being someone acting in the world no longer involves agency the feeling that somehow to be conscious has become to be a puppet that there is a that that there is a limitation on what we can do imposed by the idea that Consciousness is determined in ways that we cannot control uh and cannot get the better of so that uh strer in the ambassadors
and yadov in the Cherry Orchard speak for a point of view which is a kind of partially well-informed gloom and doom that could be understood to pervade uh texts that are much better informed uh that we will be considering but nevertheless are especially important as an aspect of their historical moment and I want to begin the next lecture uh by taking up those passages please do bring them and I will also uh be be be passing around Tony the tow truck uh and I'll give you a brief description of what the little children's book actually
looks like uh and then we will plunge into the question what is an author so I'll see on Thursday