Book contents
- Jane Austen and Other Minds
- Cambridge Studies in Romanticism
- Jane Austen and Other Minds
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Austen and Austin
- Chapter 2 Intelligible Community
- Chapter 3 Sense and Sensibility and Suffering
- Chapter 4 Pride and Prejudice and the Comedy of Perfectionism
- Chapter 5 Perlocutionary Entailments
- Chapter 6 Emma and Other Minds
- Chapter 7 Persuasion, Conviction, and Care Jane Austen’s Keeping
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Romanticism
Introduction
On Criticism and Other “Middle Subjects”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 November 2022
- Jane Austen and Other Minds
- Cambridge Studies in Romanticism
- Jane Austen and Other Minds
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Austen and Austin
- Chapter 2 Intelligible Community
- Chapter 3 Sense and Sensibility and Suffering
- Chapter 4 Pride and Prejudice and the Comedy of Perfectionism
- Chapter 5 Perlocutionary Entailments
- Chapter 6 Emma and Other Minds
- Chapter 7 Persuasion, Conviction, and Care Jane Austen’s Keeping
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Romanticism
Summary
The Introduction, “On Criticism and other middle subjects,” presents the argument of J.L. Austin’s (1947–’48) Jane Austen-inspired lectures published as Sense and Sensibilia. Austin sharply criticizes, even satirizes, the dummy presentation of “medium-sized dry goods” in his era’s dominant positivist philosophy of sense data, countering the picture of the world of things as a dry-goods store from an affirmatively critical vantage within the same medium-scale world, in terms of the ready-to-hand. In Sense and Sensibilia, Austin argues that by seeking a single kind of statement about knowledge that is incorrigible (i.e., not subject to doubt or to further challenge, incapable of being proved wrong in any context), the sense data theory of perception seeks not so much knowledge as to eliminate all risk. The chapter situates Austin’s practice of linguistic phenomenology in terms of the near-contemporary construction of the history of literary criticism by I.A. Richards in Practical Criticism as a history of “middle subjects.”
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- Information
- Jane Austen and Other MindsOrdinary Language Philosophy in Literary Fiction, pp. 1 - 21Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022