Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Poetry, Politics, and Intellectuals
- Criticism since 1940
- Introduction
- 1 Politics and American Criticism
- 2 The Emergence of Academic Criticism
- 3 The Nationalizing of the New Criticism
- 4 The Canon, the Academy, and Gender
- 5 Deconstruction and Poststructuralism
- 6 From Textuality to Materiality
- 7 Cultural and Historical Studies
- Conclusion: Academic Criticism and its Discontents
- Appendix II: Biographies of Critics
- Chronology 1940–1995
- Bibliography
- Index
Conclusion: Academic Criticism and its Discontents
from Criticism since 1940
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Poetry, Politics, and Intellectuals
- Criticism since 1940
- Introduction
- 1 Politics and American Criticism
- 2 The Emergence of Academic Criticism
- 3 The Nationalizing of the New Criticism
- 4 The Canon, the Academy, and Gender
- 5 Deconstruction and Poststructuralism
- 6 From Textuality to Materiality
- 7 Cultural and Historical Studies
- Conclusion: Academic Criticism and its Discontents
- Appendix II: Biographies of Critics
- Chronology 1940–1995
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In this volume we have told the story of the rise and development, between 1940 and the present, of a distinctly academic literary criticism. At the beginning of our period, as we observed, the very idea of a “criticism” rooted in the academy seemed inherently paradoxical. Criticism had been the purview of journalistic men (and in rare cases women) of letters. Literary academics, with the exception of the few cultural journalists who had infiltrated their ranks, were scholars and not critics, where “scholarship” often meant gathering philological and historical data addressed to other professionals and “criticism” often meant indulging in impressionistic or tendentious evaluation addressed to amateurs. With the expansion, modernization, and democratization of American higher education in the early decades of the twentieth century, however, the need arose for a study of literature that would be professional and disciplined but would serve broad cultural and educational functions beyond the scope of specialized research on language and scholarly accumulation of information. But it was only in the early 1940s that critical methods emerged that were capable of answering this need.
These were the methods of “the new academic criticism” that we discussed in our early chapters, methods that we now associate with “the New Criticism,” though, as we point out, this name originally denoted a diverse group of approaches that were often in competition. The new academic criticism generated tremendous excitement, not least for its emphasis on the close reading or “explication” of particular literary texts. Literature, it now seemed, was finally being understood on its own terms – really being read in its aesthetic complexity and particularity, not merely “appreciated” in the subjective way of journalistic men of letters or inventoried for factual data in the bloodless fashion of academic research scholars.
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- The Cambridge History of American Literature , pp. 445 - 453Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996