Author: boundary2
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Lindsay Waters: Remembering David Foster Wallace
reposted from Edward Champion’s Reluctant HabitsI am so glad you are collecting remembrances of David. Hearing more
about him, remembering him, talking about him makes me feel better.
It’s the only consolation that works for me. It is so weird he hangs
himself when he did. He hung himself and let himself crash days before
the stock market crashed. There’s something very Slothrop about this.But let’s not forget in the moment of his death or ever that David
was an advocate of a full-blooded response to life and to artworks. The
way I can carry on his work is to develop and publish more books that
make people feel it’s not OK to respond to life and art with a blasé
snootiness. It’s our moral duty to embrace both of them and even to
embrace him in death.I had some good dealings with David in which he did not hold back
his responses to life. He was a wonderful colleague for my dear friends
at the Dalkey Archive Press like John O’Brien, when it was located at
Normal, Illinois, just down the road from where I was raised in St.
Charles. There was something militantly Midwestern about David, and
that was a great thing in my eyes. Normal, IL. Normal. Illinois. Well,
if you’ve read and looked at Michael Lesey’s Wisconsin Death Trip,
you’ll know you ought to be a little careful if you go to my normal
Illinois or David’s. But I think the Dalkey Archive people with their
journals and love of strange books from France and Russia provided a
wonderful environment for David. Their spirit and his seems to be that
espoused by Tom Petty when he sang, “She was an American girl, raised
in the provinces. Couldn’t help thinking there was a bit more life
somewhere else.”The East Coast can be hostile in different ways. David thrived at
Amherst; but not at Harvard. I talked to David long after he’d
abandoned Harvard and gone on to Illinois normalcy and extraordinary
literary achievement. I met him when he tried to interest me in
publishing a book on Cantor’s philosophy of mathematics. David was not
goofinig around with philosophy. David was raised in the richest
philosophical soil we have in this country, the equivalent of the black
earth of Illinois where he lived so long. We Americans are good at this
stuff, and have been since the time of Perice and Royce. I know his
uncle, John Wallace, a philosopher at Minnesota with whom I worked
closely when I worked at the University of Minnesota Press; and I knew
of his father, a philosopher of highest repute at Illinois. This book
on Cantor was not a fit for my list which features really technical
books like those of Willard van Orman Quine, but the manuscript was
really good. When we talked about why he left philosophy, he mentioned
a snot-nosed grandee at Harvard who was unpleasant and treated him and
not just him with disdain. I was sorry he did not find the really
loving folks our department has, but that’s the way it was. And I would
have been and had been just as put off by that guy’s behavior.I was going to write that philosophy’s loss was literature’s gain,
but that is glib and false. He never stopped being the sharpest of
thinkers, and what I love about books like Supposedly Fun Thing is that the reasoning is so powerful and all set forth in a pop style that makes it a delight to for me to read .So he left the provinces for LA. It’s a city that’s been hard on lots of writers.
David was a half-generation younger than me, but I’m taking his loss
personally. He bridges the generations: my son Eric loves his writing
as much as I do. We once went to hear him read from a new book,
ironically in Emerson Hall at Harvard where the philosophy department
has its offices. For me seeing him go is like seeing one of the most
hopeful signs of life in this country gone. All the more reason, I
feel, for me to pursue what I understand as his agenda for
thinking—opening up the doors of perception.David Foster Wallace forever changed the way I regard footnotes.
Because of his brilliance and originality, whenever I am reading a text
with footnotes I turn to them eagerly, armed with the expectation that
the universe just might expand a little more in a surprising way,
hoping that the tiny print will fizz like Pop Rocks with witty
precision. I am almost always disappointed. But I will read the next
one, and the next one, hoping to find that graceful, magical
elucidation one more time.I didn’t know DFW personally, but reading his words, I often
imagined I did. The Metafilter thread alone demonstrates that I’m not
alone in this, not by a long shot. In that sense, at least, DFW was
successful in his aim to counter our everyday sense of alienation. It’s
a deep shame that he couldn’t likewise benefit from his own gift.I was terribly saddened to hear this news. Whatever one felt about
his work, it was hard to imagine any serious reader of fiction not
being intensely interested in what he was going to do next. I had been
looking forward to witnessing his literary journey, and to adjusting my
own opinions and prejudices — or rather, being forced by the quality of
the work to do so. Of great interest to me was his own ambivalent
relation with some elements of postmodernism (irony, too-easy
elf-consciousness, and so on), and the burgeoning presence of moral
critique in his work. One had the feeling that his new work was being
written under considerable pressure — and I don’t just mean
psychological pressure, but the pressure of staying loyal to his
fractured, non-linear epistemology while at the same time incorporating
some of that admiration he had for the concerns of the
nineteenth-century novel. To put it flippantly, he was aesthetically
radical and metaphysically conservative, and the negotiation of that
asymmetry would have been a marvelous thing to follow, as a reader.An untruthful reviewer of my book, How Fiction Works, claimed
that David Foster Wallace was its “aesthetic villain.” That is not
true. I discussed him as an extreme example of a tension I think is
endemic to post-Flaubertian fiction, which is the question, as Martin
Amis once put it, of “who’s in charge”: is it the stylish author, who
sees the world in his fabulous language, or his probably less stylish
characters, who are borrowing the author’s words? Wallace’s fiction, I
wrote, “prosecutes an intense argument about the decomposition of
language in America, and he is not afraid to to decompose — and
discompose — his own style in the interests of making us live through
this linguistic America with him.” One of the most impressive aspects
of Wallace was that stylistic fearlessness.On Friday, I was pondering writing a note to Wallace to say as much
(and to correct the impression he might have got from that review), and
then on Saturday came the terrible news — “like a man slapped.” -
Special Issue on the 1960s
- Christopher Connery and Hortense J. Spillers
- Introduction: The Still Vacillating Equilibrium of the World
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Wlad Godzich March 1968 in Poland
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Nina Power and Alberto ToscanoThe Philosophy of Restoration: Alain Badiou and the Enemies of May
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John Beverley Rethinking the Armed Struggle in Latin America
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Roberto Fernández Retamar Martí in His (Third) World
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Boris Kagarlitsky1960s East and West: The Nature of the Shestidesiatniki and the New Left
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Silvia D. SpittaRevisiting the Sixties and Refusing Trash: Preamble to and Interview with Peter Schumann of Bread and Puppet Theater
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Anthony Bogues Black Power, Decolonization, and Caribbean Politics: Walter Rodney and the Politics of The Groundings with My Brothers [Abstract]
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Hortense J. Spillers"Long Time": Last Daughters and the New "New South"
[Abstract]
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Christopher Connery The End of the Sixties
Books Received [PDF]
Contributors
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Lindsay Waters on "The Book Show, "ABC Radio
Lindsay discusses ‘Slow Reading’ for the Australian Radio Network’s featured literary radio show. -
Stathis Gourgouris on St. Paul
Stathis Gourgouris has asked me to post his essay,The Present of a Delusion, to the web site. The essay is forthcoming in Paul and the Philosophers, Ward Blanton,
Creston Davis, and Hent de Vries eds., Duke University Press, 2009. -
Tony Bogues, "Obama and the Prophetic Tradition"
Tony Bogues speaks with Christopher Lydon on Open Source, January 30, 2009.[audio src="http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Watson_Institute/Open_Source/RadioOpenSource-Anthony_Bogues.mp3" /]
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Echoes of Bercovitch in the Obama Inaugural Donald Pease
As I was listening to Barack Obama’s Inaugural Address this past Tuesday, it occurred to me that its rhetoric might serve as a textbook example of what Sacvan Bercovitch famously called an American Jeremiad. Obama urged his listeners to imagine themselves in a wintry campsite in the year of America’s birth, in the coldest of months, when the outcome of the American Revolution was very much in doubt so that they might understand the lasting importance of the following epistle that George Washington, the nation’s founding father, ordered be read to all the troops: "Let it be told to the future world … that in the depth of winter, when nothing but hope and virtue could survive … that the city and the country, alarmed at one common danger, came forth to meet [it]." This passage included the core ingredients of the American Jeremiad. In it Obama urged his listeners to embrace the ethos of the American revolution so that they might turn away from the course of corporate greed and political corruption that brought America to one of its darkest hours. Obama then enjoined his listeners to rededicate themselves to the nation’s founding principles so that they might renew what America had been and will be.
From the beginning of his scholarly career Bercovitch has persuasively demonstrated how orations like Obama’s were constructed out of a set of emulable rhetorical conventions that ratified the continuation of the already constituted order of things. On January 20,2009, Barack Obama did urge all Americans to rededicate themselves to the nation’s constituting principles in a rhetoric that reaffirmed the political order constituted out of those principles. But what marked this address anomalous to the American Jeremiad was revealed in its having in fact effected a transformative change in the order of things. In the remarks that follow I’ll attempt to explain why Obama’s address forged an exception to the ruling norms of the American Jeremiad by briefly reflecting on the genealogy and provenance of Bercovitch’s brilliant interpretation of American literary and political culture.
In his first book, The Puritan Origins of the American Self, Bercovitch explained how the Puritans transported the seat of empire from the old world to the new; how their 18th century heirs strategically changed the meaning of newness from a sign of the colonial status of dependency to the assertion at first of political uniqueness and later of moral superiority; and how, in the name of this complex sense of the new, the nation’s founders imagined that the virgin land had itself authorized an imperial summons to conquest and expansion. Bercovitch’s benchmark work, The American Jeremiad, convincingly demonstrated how the very terms through which American political leaders expressed their dissent indirectly ratified the society’s most cherished ideals. In explicating the characteristic literary strategy of Nathaniel Hawthorne as involving the intrication of demands for radical social change within structures of political continuity, Bercovitch’s The A-Politics of the Scarlet Letter provided a concrete example of this deeply entrenched cultural dynamic. Unlike his precursors, Bercovitch interpreted Hawthorne’s art of moral ambiguation as complicitous with a more pervasive cultural ritual that ratified embedded structures of political assent.
With the publication of The Rites of Assent Bercovitch extended the reach of this analytic framework to American Studies scholarship. Upon remarking the ways in which the analytic tools of American studies consisted of the same structures-patterns of thought, myth and language-that americanist scholars had set out to investigate, Bercovitch correlated americanists’ "rituals" of dissent with more encompassing forces of social integration in American society. With this expansion of the dominion of his paradigm, Bercovitch rejected in advance any possible grounds for the conversion of dissent (whether expressed implicitly by literary works or explicitly by political groups) into the bases for actual social change. American ideology refutes and absorbs subversive cultural energies, Bercovitch cogently observed, "harnessing discontent to the social enterprise" by drawing out protest and turning it into a rite of ideological assent.1 I criticized Bercovitch’s inability to explain the historically verifiable instances of social change that took place during the American Renaissance in Visionary Compacts: American Renaissance Writings in Cultural Context. In their debates over the highly charged issues of expansionism, the national bank, slavery, and secession, American politicians and writers deployed the rhetoric of the American jeremiad to support utterly incompatible causes. When representatives of each of these factions used the American Jeremiad to give hortatory expression to their uncompromising views on these matters, they deprived the Jeremiad of its power to reinstitute an encompassing rite of assent.
But my critique did not detract from the profound insight underpinning Bercovitch ‘s project. Like John Rawls, Bercovitch recognized that as a liberal political society, the United States promoted civic harmony through the exchange of conflicting opinions among individuals who presupposed a shared and overlapping consensus about the nature of political liberalism. Unlike Bercovitch, however, this Rawls invoked this insight to introduce an exception to liberal orthodoxies. According to Rawls, political liberalism could not acknowledge the absolute truth value of any one political position, but only the relative values of positions to which it was reasonable either to assent or to dissent.
It was Rawls’s view that political liberalism could not admit a position that was founded upon an absolute truth claim without violating the asssumptions of the liberal political sphere as such. When he arrived at this formulation, Rawls was also conducting a tacit dialogue with Carl Schmitt. In The Concept of the Political, Schmitt had maintained that, in fostering a notion of politics as the noncoercive exchange of more or less equivalent political positions, political liberalism had to remain blind to the defining trait of the political sphere. Schmitt defined that foundational trait as the irreconcilable antagonism between political friends and political enemies. Political liberalism could not permit an irreconcilable opposition between friend and enemy to appear within the political sphere without losing its essential attribute, the recognition of the formal equivalence of all political positions. If the liberal state required the homogeneity of the political sphere for its stability, it could only achieve that stability by prohibiting what Carl Schmitt meant by politics.
These observations led Schmitt to the conclusion that if the liberal state did not represent at least one political disposition as an enemy to the field of liberal politics as such, that field would remain vulnerable to becoming violently disrupted by the appearance within it of political discourses that were predicated on the friend-enemy distinction that it had foreclosed. During the cold war the national security state turned Schmitt’s insight into the rationale for changing the rules of the entire political order. At its outset, the US government replaced the liberal state with the national security state, by declaring the totalizing truth claims of marxian Communism an exception to the rules of the liberal political order as such.
In turning Communism into an exception to the rule of political inclusiveness, the cold war state also shifted the terrain of political conflict from the internal domestic affairs of the nation-state to the international arena, where the conflict over fundamental political values was understood to be the matter of a conflict between utterly different imperial state formations. The national security state thereby enabled US political society to remain substantively homogeneous and yet open to a range of poli
tical positions and heterogeneous populations through this construction of an exception to its rules of democratic inclusiveness.Bercovitch’s paradigm accurately described the obsessive cultural rituals though which cold war ideology celebrated the proliferation of political dissent as an example of what rendered the United States the leader of the free world. But like the cold war ideology it reflected, Bercovitch’s paradigm presupposed that absolutist views and foundational truth claims would always be excluded from liberal political society. Bercovitch’s account of American Jeremiad lost some of its explanatory reach in the wake of the cold war when evangelical Christians, market fundamentalists, pro life activists and paramilitary groups declared their irreconcilable opposition to their political enemies. The absolutist claims and fundamentalist values that these groups introduced into the liberal political sphere violated what Rawls and Bercovitch described as its foundational assumptions.
President George W. Bush abrogated the assumptions formative of the liberal political sphere in their entirety in 2001 when he declared a State of Exception to the constitutional order so as to exercise the extra-legal powers necessary to conduct a global war on terror. While the war supplied the occasion for the state to enact extra-constitutional, illegal violence, it also rendered the sites at which the state exercised this violence vulnerable to being declared unconstitutional.
The Bush State of Exception imposed severe limitations on the people’s constitutional rights. It was at the site of those imposed limitations that Barack Obama inaugurated a presidential campaign that was indistinguishable from a constitutional movement. His campaign turned on the American people’s right not merely to question or dissent from the State of Exception but to displace it altogether with a reaffirmation of the nation’s constituting principles. That’s why his reassertion of the constitutional principles of liberty and equality were transformative rather than reactionary. When Barack Obama, who represented members of the US polity who had been denied entitlement to them, rededicated the entire nation to its constituting principles, "We the People" had not performed a rite of assent but a successful overthrow of an unconstitutional order.
I recommend reading the address through the lens of Bercovitch’s theory of American Jeremiad to recognize what was truly transformative about this moment.
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The 2009 FUTURES OF AMERICAN STUDIES Institute
Dartmouth College announces
The 2009 FUTURES OF AMERICAN STUDIES Institute
RE-CONFIGURATIONS OF AMERICAN STUDIES
Monday, June 22 – Saturday, June 26, 2009
Director: Donald E. Pease (Dartmouth College)
Co-Directors: Elizabeth Dillon (Northeastern University)
Winfried Fluck (Freie Universitaet, Berlin)
Eric W. Lott (University of Virginia)
Institute Faculty:
Nancy Bentley (University of Pennsylvania), Colleen Boggs (Dartmouth College), Barrymore Anthony Bogues (Brown University), Anna Brickhouse (University of Virginia), Hamilton Carroll (University of Leeds), Christopher Castiglia (Pennsylvania State University), Russ Castronovo (University of Wisconsin), Michael Chaney (Dartmouth College), Tim Dean (State University of New York, Buffalo), Soyica Diggs (Dartmouth College), J. Martin Favor (Dartmouth College), Nancy Fraser (New School), Jeffrey Glover (University of Rochester), Macarena Gomez-Barris (University of Southern California), Judith Halberstam (University of Southern California), Andrew Hebard (Miami University of Ohio), Donatella Izzo (University of Naples), Cindi Katz (City University of New York), George Lipsitz (University of California, Santa Barbara), Lee Medovoi (Portland State University), Klaus Milich (Dartmouth College), José Munoz ( New York University), Alan Nadel (University of Kentucky), Anders Olsson (Upssala University, Sweden), John Carlos Rowe (University of Southern California), José David Saldívar (University of California), Ramon Soto-Crespo (State University of New York, Buffalo), Paul Smith (George Mason University). Maurice Stevens (Ohio State University)
Description:
This year of the Institute is the fourth of a four-year focus on “Re-configurations of American Studies.” This topic is meant to foreground the reflexive turn in the cultures of American studies both inside and outside the United States. As such, we are inviting both scholars well known as "Americanists" internationally and those whose theoretical frameworks, objects of study, and disciplinary inclinations promise to transform the field’s self-understanding.
The Institute is divided into plenary sessions which feature current work from Institute faculty (listed above) and research seminars in which all participants present and discuss their own works-in-progress. Speakers in the plenary sessions will examine the relation between emergent and residual practices in the field of American Studies from a variety of interdisciplinary perspectives. The Institute welcomes participants who are involved in a range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary fields and who are interested in current critical debates in American Studies.
The Institute was designed to provide a shared space of critical inquiry that brings the participants’ work-in-progress to the attention of a network of influential scholars. Over the past ten years, plenary speakers have recommended participants’ work to the leading journals and university presses within the field of American Studies, and have provided participants with recommendations and support in an increasingly competitive job market.
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Wlad Godzich, “Aisthesis before Theoria: Grappling with the Un(re)cognized”
Wlad Godzich was to have spoken in Taiwan at a conference convened by a friend of b2, Allen Chun. The conference title was "The Unthinkable—Thinking Beyond the Limits of Culture" and was held at the Institute
of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, December
13-14, 2008. For medical reasons, Wlad could not attend but he presented his lecture by video link. To view this talk, visit the following URL:
http://128.114.188.55/Movies/godzich_presentation.movWlad’s paper deals with theory in the contemporary world and contains considerable comment on Walter Benjamin and Orham Pamuk. Thanks for Allen Chun for circulating this link and to Wlad Godzich for permission to post it here.
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Teachers Against Occupation
This note from David Lloyd:FYI: an organization called teachers against Occupation
has formed in response to the assault on Gaza.
It is based for now at University of Minnesota. They encourage others to form local chapters
and communicate through their site:htttp://www.teachersagainstoccupation.blogspot.com <http://www.teachersagainstoccupation.blogspot.com/>
An Open Letter to Obama is there which you are invited to
sign if you are interested. If so,
please send a note to teachers.against.occupation@gmail.com. I hope that we can work collectively on
strategies to change business as usual as regards Palestine.Please forward this information.