{"title":"Everyday","authors":"W. Galperin","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.1060","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The central issue surrounding the “everyday” in relation to literature and to literary study is etymological: a distinction between the “everyday,” a Romantic-period neologism that names both a site of interest and a representational alternative to both the probable and the fantastic; and “everydayness,” a mid-19th-century coinage, reflecting developments particular to urbanization, industrialization, and the rise of capital. This distinction has largely vanished, reflecting the influence of social science, and theory on the humanities and the flight in general from phenomenology. Nevertheless, as the first discourse actually to register the uncanniness of the everyday, literature provides an approach to everyday life that is not only in contrast to the limitations and routines linked to everydayness but also a reminder of possibilities and enchantments that are always close at hand. Although Maurice Blanchot’s axiom that “the everyday is never what we see a first time, but only see again” is as applicable to “everyday life studies” as it is to literature and to related theories of perception, there are fundamental differences. From the perspective of the human sciences and social theory, this discovery is recursive: “the everyday” proceeds from something that “escapes”—which, like ideology, is never quite seen—to something suddenly visible or seen again but with no alteration apart from being retrieved and corralled as a condition of being understood and in many cases lamented. In literature, the escape is ongoing. A parallel world of which we are unaware, or unmindful, becomes visible as if for the first time, but as a condition of remaining missable and always discoverable.","PeriodicalId":207246,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature","volume":"11 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-05-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"11","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.013.1060","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 11

Abstract

The central issue surrounding the “everyday” in relation to literature and to literary study is etymological: a distinction between the “everyday,” a Romantic-period neologism that names both a site of interest and a representational alternative to both the probable and the fantastic; and “everydayness,” a mid-19th-century coinage, reflecting developments particular to urbanization, industrialization, and the rise of capital. This distinction has largely vanished, reflecting the influence of social science, and theory on the humanities and the flight in general from phenomenology. Nevertheless, as the first discourse actually to register the uncanniness of the everyday, literature provides an approach to everyday life that is not only in contrast to the limitations and routines linked to everydayness but also a reminder of possibilities and enchantments that are always close at hand. Although Maurice Blanchot’s axiom that “the everyday is never what we see a first time, but only see again” is as applicable to “everyday life studies” as it is to literature and to related theories of perception, there are fundamental differences. From the perspective of the human sciences and social theory, this discovery is recursive: “the everyday” proceeds from something that “escapes”—which, like ideology, is never quite seen—to something suddenly visible or seen again but with no alteration apart from being retrieved and corralled as a condition of being understood and in many cases lamented. In literature, the escape is ongoing. A parallel world of which we are unaware, or unmindful, becomes visible as if for the first time, but as a condition of remaining missable and always discoverable.
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围绕“日常”与文学和文学研究的关系的中心问题是语源学:“日常”之间的区别,这是一个浪漫主义时期的新词,它既命名了一个有趣的地方,也命名了一个可能的和不可思议的代表性替代;“everydayness”是19世纪中期的新词,反映了城市化、工业化和资本崛起的发展。这种区别在很大程度上已经消失,反映了社会科学和人文理论的影响,以及从现象学的普遍逃离。然而,作为第一个真正记录日常生活的不可思议的话语,文学提供了一种日常生活的方法,不仅与日常生活的限制和惯例形成对比,而且还提醒人们随时随地的可能性和魅力。尽管莫里斯·布朗肖(Maurice Blanchot)的“日常绝不是我们第一次看到的东西,而只是再次看到的东西”这一公理适用于“日常生活研究”,就像它适用于文学和相关的感知理论一样,但两者存在根本差异。从人文科学和社会理论的角度来看,这一发现是递归的:“日常生活”是从“逃逸”的东西——就像意识形态一样,永远不会被完全看到——到突然可见或再次看到的东西,除了作为一种被理解和在许多情况下被哀叹的条件被检索和收集之外,没有任何改变。在文学中,这种逃避是持续不断的。一个我们没有意识到或没有注意到的平行世界,似乎是第一次出现在我们眼前,但这是一种无法被发现、却总是被发现的状态。
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