友好与不友好的思考:对“陪伴风格”的回应

Q1 Arts and Humanities Spenser Studies Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1086/723531
Rachel Eisendrath
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对于一个早期现代文学评论家来说,与另一个思想家,特别是与一个现代的、明确的哲学思想家一起思考,意味着什么?想象两个截然不同的场景。首先想象一下,一群文艺复兴时期的学者在开会,你作为演讲者,正在谈论一部我们都知道的戏剧,比如《仲夏夜之梦》。在你提出你的观点之前,提到底部,会让我们中的许多人微笑,互相愉快地看一眼。我们,你们的观众,想起了我们的共同点:我们对这个令人愉快的角色的共同认识,在某种程度上,我们对评论家对他的评价的共同认识。通过说出“底部”这个词,你似乎要讲述一个我们都知道的故事——在这种情况下,一个家庭故事。但是现在想象一下,相反地,在这个文艺复兴学者的会议上,你开始你的演讲,开始阐述西奥多·w·阿多诺,罗兰·巴特,雅克·朗西弗里特的观点。你可能会遇到完全不同的反应。当你第一次提到这位理论家的名字时,你可能会发现自己漂浮在一片茫然的目光中;你可能会遇到一两个皱眉的人。你可能
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Companionable and Uncompanionable Thinking: A Response to “Styles of Companionship”
hat does it mean for an early modern literary critic to think with another thinker, in particular with a thinker who is modern and explicitly philosophical? Well, imagine two contrasting scenes. Begin by imagining a meeting of Renaissance scholars, where you, the speaker, are talking about a play we all know—say, A Midsummer Night’s Dream. To mention Bottom is, even before you make your point, to make many of us smile and glance at one another happily. We, your audience, are reminded of what we hold in common: our shared knowledge of this delightful character and, to some extent, our shared knowledge of what critics have said about him. By saying the word “Bottom,” you appear to be about to tell a story that we all know—in this context, a family story. But now imagine, in contrast, that at this same meeting of Renaissance scholars you begin your presentation by launching into an account of an idea of Theodor W. Adorno’s or Roland Barthes’s or Jacques Rancière’s. You may encounter a quite different response. At your first mention of the theorist’s name, you may find yourself afloat on a sea of largely flat stares; you may encounter a frown or two. You may
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来源期刊
Spenser Studies
Spenser Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
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Front Matter “Soveraigne place”: Spenser with Henri Lefebvre Thinking through Symbionts: Spenser with Donna Haraway On Dissonance and Late Style: Spenser with Theodor W. Adorno In the Person of the Author: A Response to “Imagined Companions”
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