美国的碎片:丹尼尔·迪兹·库奇的《共和早期未完成形式的政治美学》和杰罗姆·麦克甘的《交叉目的下的文化与语言:美国定居的未确定记录》(书评)

IF 0.4 3区 社会学 N/A HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1353/ecs.2023.a909457
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Both identify the implications of their focus well beyond genre. Both ask scholars in the field to read unfamiliar or non-canonical materials in relation to canonical materials that, each argues, can and ought to be [End Page 111] re-read in their light. Despite these parallel methods, each study makes a significant intervention that is not identical––neither readily complementary nor obviously incompatible––with the other's. Nothing, of course, necessarily compels anyone to consider these texts together. But it seems that the absence of any such imperative brings into focus a consequential limitation in two otherwise impressive monographs. After considering each on its own, then, let's consider their relation. Jerome McGann's Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes begins with the premise that for scholars of colonial North American literature, \"nothing is more widely recognized than its 'practical' character\" (3). That is to say, this study extends a line of thinking that presupposes the public and occasional value of colonial texts––sermons, speeches, narratives––rather than any more aesthetic value, especially in the modernist, \"art-for-art's sake\" sense. With this assumption in place, McGann's study draws attention to ways a history of multiple violated treaties with Native tribes haunts this colonial North American literature. This literature, the study argues, is tuned to a frequency where \"the struggle to maintain social order under complex and dangerous conditions, and to persist in the struggle against all odds and in the continual experience of unsuccess and disappointment, nonfeasance and outright malfeasance\" is everywhere in the background, a noise that can't be filtered out (13). Can't be, but also shouldn't be: the heart of Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes rallies around the idea that telling \"impossible\" truths and protecting human memories are the tasks of scholarly vocation (217). The historical dimension of this thesis astonishes with its force, and its imbricated development across eleven chapters and two interchapters points to some of the lengths Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes takes to demonstrate an argument about what in early North American texts and canons is present and absent all at once. Bookending the study are chapters that explore the history of kaswentha, identified here as the central ritual behind treaty-making, a ceremony of Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) origin, whose procedures predate seventeenth-century European settlement (10). Middle chapters reread well-studied colonial texts––including by John Winthrop, Cotton Mather, Anne Bradstreet, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson––to tease out of them the haunted presence of often specific treaty violations, with intriguing and original results. Particularly noteworthy is the short interchapter on Franklin's Treaty Folios––pamphlet texts that print proceedings from treaty discussions between Natives and settlers, though not without distortions. Part of that noteworthiness is the examination of less commonly studied texts than, for example, Franklin's Autobiography, the subject of the subsequent chapter. Rereading mostly canonical works of colonial North American literature in light of a history that surely bears on them and yet has not definitively been connected to them, Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes offers scholars an experiment in trying to understand what \"we do not know that we do not know\" (5). This study is wholly and thoroughly admirable in its intention, even if it is occasionally strained in its execution. One part of this strain is the organizational complexity of the narrative, its impressively nested and moving parts. Yet another was...","PeriodicalId":45802,"journal":{"name":"EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"American Fragments: The Political Aesthetic of Unfinished Forms in the Early Republic by Daniel Diez Couch, and: Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes: The Unsettled Records of American Settlement by Jerome McGann (review)\",\"authors\":\"\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/ecs.2023.a909457\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Reviewed by: American Fragments: The Political Aesthetic of Unfinished Forms in the Early Republic by Daniel Diez Couch, and: Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes: The Unsettled Records of American Settlement by Jerome McGann Jordan Alexander Stein Daniel Diez Couch, American Fragments: The Political Aesthetic of Unfinished Forms in the Early Republic ( Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 2022). Pp. 281; 8 b/w illus. $69.95 cloth. Jerome McGann, Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes: The Unsettled Records of American Settlement ( Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 2022). Pp. 272; 11 b/w illus. $95.00 cloth, $30.00 paper. The two monographs under review proceed at the intersection of material textual studies (sometimes elsewhere called book history or the sociology of texts) and formalist readings of genre. Both identify the implications of their focus well beyond genre. Both ask scholars in the field to read unfamiliar or non-canonical materials in relation to canonical materials that, each argues, can and ought to be [End Page 111] re-read in their light. Despite these parallel methods, each study makes a significant intervention that is not identical––neither readily complementary nor obviously incompatible––with the other's. Nothing, of course, necessarily compels anyone to consider these texts together. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

由丹尼尔·迪兹·库奇的《美国碎片:共和国早期未完成形式的政治美学》和《交叉目的的文化和语言:美国定居的未解决记录》(杰罗姆·麦克甘,乔丹·亚历山大·斯坦,丹尼尔·迪兹·库奇,《美国碎片:共和国早期未完成形式的政治美学》(费城:宾夕法尼亚大学出版社,2022)。页。281;8 b/w。布69.95美元。杰罗姆·麦克甘,文化和语言在交叉目的:未解决的美国定居点的记录(芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社,2022)。页。272;11 b/w。布95美元,纸30美元。这两本专著是在材料文本研究(有时在其他地方被称为书史或文本社会学)和体裁的形式主义阅读的交叉点上进行的。两者都明确了他们的关注点远远超出了类型的含义。两者都要求该领域的学者阅读不熟悉的或非规范的材料,与规范材料的关系,每个人都认为,可以而且应该在他们的观点下重新阅读。尽管有这些平行的方法,但每项研究都做出了重要的干预,这些干预与其他研究并不相同——既不容易互补,也不明显不相容。当然,没有什么能强迫任何人把这些文本放在一起考虑。但是,似乎没有任何这样的必要性,这两本令人印象深刻的专著中出现了一个相应的限制。在分别考虑了它们之后,让我们来考虑它们之间的关系。杰罗姆·麦克甘(Jerome McGann)的《文化与语言的交叉目的》(cultural and Language at cross Purposes)一书以这样一个前提开始:对于研究北美殖民文学的学者来说,“没有什么比它的‘实用’特征更被广泛认可的了”(3)。也就是说,这项研究扩展了一种思维方式,即假定殖民文本——说教、演讲、叙事——具有公共和偶然的价值,而不是美学价值,尤其是在现代主义的、“为艺术而艺术”的意义上。有了这个假设,麦克甘的研究让人们注意到,与土著部落多次违反条约的历史如何困扰着北美殖民文学。该研究认为,这些文献被调谐到一个频率,即“在复杂和危险的条件下维持社会秩序的斗争,坚持与所有困难作斗争,在不断经历失败和失望、不作为和完全渎职的情况下”无处不在,这是一种无法过滤掉的噪音(13)。不可能是,但也不应该是:《文化与语言的交叉目的》一书的核心观点是,讲述“不可能”的真相和保护人类记忆是学术职业的任务(217)。这篇论文的历史维度以其力量令人惊讶,它在十一章和两章间的错综复杂的发展表明,《文化与语言的交叉目的》用了一定的篇幅来论证早期北美文本和教规中存在和缺失的东西。本研究的结尾处是探索kaswentha历史的章节,在这里,kaswentha被认为是条约制定背后的核心仪式,一种起源于易洛魁人(豪德诺桑人)的仪式,其程序早于17世纪的欧洲定居(10)。中间几章重读了经过充分研究的殖民文本——包括约翰·温斯洛普、科顿·马瑟、安妮·布拉德斯特里特、本杰明·富兰克林和托马斯·杰斐逊的作品——从中梳理出经常出现的具体违反条约的情况,得出了有趣而新颖的结果。特别值得注意的是富兰克林的《对开本条约》(Treaty Folios)的短章节间——这些小册子文本印刷了土著和定居者之间条约讨论的过程,尽管并非没有扭曲。值得注意的部分原因是对不太常被研究的文本的研究,例如富兰克林的自传,这是下一章的主题。重读北美殖民时期的经典文学作品,考虑到历史确实与它们有关,但并没有明确地与它们联系在一起,《文化与语言的交叉目的》为学者们提供了一个尝试理解“我们不知道我们不知道什么”的实验(5)。这项研究的意图是完全和彻底的令人钦佩的,即使它在执行过程中偶尔有些紧张。这种张力的一部分是叙事的组织复杂性,其令人印象深刻的嵌套和移动部分。还有一个是……
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American Fragments: The Political Aesthetic of Unfinished Forms in the Early Republic by Daniel Diez Couch, and: Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes: The Unsettled Records of American Settlement by Jerome McGann (review)
Reviewed by: American Fragments: The Political Aesthetic of Unfinished Forms in the Early Republic by Daniel Diez Couch, and: Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes: The Unsettled Records of American Settlement by Jerome McGann Jordan Alexander Stein Daniel Diez Couch, American Fragments: The Political Aesthetic of Unfinished Forms in the Early Republic ( Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 2022). Pp. 281; 8 b/w illus. $69.95 cloth. Jerome McGann, Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes: The Unsettled Records of American Settlement ( Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press, 2022). Pp. 272; 11 b/w illus. $95.00 cloth, $30.00 paper. The two monographs under review proceed at the intersection of material textual studies (sometimes elsewhere called book history or the sociology of texts) and formalist readings of genre. Both identify the implications of their focus well beyond genre. Both ask scholars in the field to read unfamiliar or non-canonical materials in relation to canonical materials that, each argues, can and ought to be [End Page 111] re-read in their light. Despite these parallel methods, each study makes a significant intervention that is not identical––neither readily complementary nor obviously incompatible––with the other's. Nothing, of course, necessarily compels anyone to consider these texts together. But it seems that the absence of any such imperative brings into focus a consequential limitation in two otherwise impressive monographs. After considering each on its own, then, let's consider their relation. Jerome McGann's Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes begins with the premise that for scholars of colonial North American literature, "nothing is more widely recognized than its 'practical' character" (3). That is to say, this study extends a line of thinking that presupposes the public and occasional value of colonial texts––sermons, speeches, narratives––rather than any more aesthetic value, especially in the modernist, "art-for-art's sake" sense. With this assumption in place, McGann's study draws attention to ways a history of multiple violated treaties with Native tribes haunts this colonial North American literature. This literature, the study argues, is tuned to a frequency where "the struggle to maintain social order under complex and dangerous conditions, and to persist in the struggle against all odds and in the continual experience of unsuccess and disappointment, nonfeasance and outright malfeasance" is everywhere in the background, a noise that can't be filtered out (13). Can't be, but also shouldn't be: the heart of Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes rallies around the idea that telling "impossible" truths and protecting human memories are the tasks of scholarly vocation (217). The historical dimension of this thesis astonishes with its force, and its imbricated development across eleven chapters and two interchapters points to some of the lengths Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes takes to demonstrate an argument about what in early North American texts and canons is present and absent all at once. Bookending the study are chapters that explore the history of kaswentha, identified here as the central ritual behind treaty-making, a ceremony of Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) origin, whose procedures predate seventeenth-century European settlement (10). Middle chapters reread well-studied colonial texts––including by John Winthrop, Cotton Mather, Anne Bradstreet, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson––to tease out of them the haunted presence of often specific treaty violations, with intriguing and original results. Particularly noteworthy is the short interchapter on Franklin's Treaty Folios––pamphlet texts that print proceedings from treaty discussions between Natives and settlers, though not without distortions. Part of that noteworthiness is the examination of less commonly studied texts than, for example, Franklin's Autobiography, the subject of the subsequent chapter. Rereading mostly canonical works of colonial North American literature in light of a history that surely bears on them and yet has not definitively been connected to them, Culture and Language at Crossed Purposes offers scholars an experiment in trying to understand what "we do not know that we do not know" (5). This study is wholly and thoroughly admirable in its intention, even if it is occasionally strained in its execution. One part of this strain is the organizational complexity of the narrative, its impressively nested and moving parts. Yet another was...
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来源期刊
EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES
EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
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期刊介绍: As the official publication of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS), Eighteenth-Century Studies is committed to publishing the best of current writing on all aspects of eighteenth-century culture. The journal selects essays that employ different modes of analysis and disciplinary discourses to explore how recent historiographical, critical, and theoretical ideas have engaged scholars concerned with the eighteenth century.
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