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10/29/2016

CRITICAL DISCOURSE

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CRITICAL DISCOURSE

CRITICAL DISCOURSE:
A SURVEY OF LITERARY THEORISTS

Robert de Beaugrande

Institute for the Psychological Study of the Arts


University of Florida, Gainesville
and
Crump Institute for Medical Engineering
University of California, Los Angeles
1988

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Graphic Conventions
1
2

What Can Texts Be?


What Can Literature Be?

What Can Literary Theory Be?

Ren Wellek and Austin Warren

Northrop Frye

6
7

Leslie Fiedler
Eric Donald Hirsch

Wolfgang Iser

Hans Robert Jauss

10

Norman Holland

11
12

David Bleich
Bernard Paris

13

Jonathan Culler

14

Paul de Man

15

Harold Bloom

16
17

Geoffrey Hartman
Fredric Jameson

18

Kate Millett

19

Luce Irigaray

20

Literary Theory Past and Future


References

FOREWORD
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FOREWORD

Like many people preoccupied with literature, I often ponder what is at stake: why I would write or read literary texts, what I stand
to gain by doing so, and how I could convey all this to anyone else, especially to my colleagues and students. These questions grow
acute when our culture tends to relegate literature to the margins of social activity, or to preserve it mainly for unengaging schoolroom
exercises in 'trivia' -- knowledge compiled from isolated facts without regard for human usefulness or intellectual relevance.
Having been fortunate enough to earn my doctorate at the University of California, Irvine while the School of Critical Theory was
based there, I had the opportunity to hear numerous prominent scholars in person endeavouring to expound the fundamental issues
of literature. However, listening to their lectures and reading their occasional papers often proved wholly insufficient to grasp their
ideas. Since I have often declared that the surest (though by no means the easiest) way to comprehend complex issues is to write
about them, I have now taken my own advice.
During the two years of writing principally during a sabbatical in Mazatln, overlooking the Pacific -- I felt impelled not merely to
expound and synthesize, but also to suggest reservations and counter-positions respecting the critical proceedings I encountered.
Moreover, the intent to situate the theorists in a common context had to be balanced with the need to respond to each in accordance
with his or her individual method, and to reflect that method back upon itself by pursuing its consequences. Though this dialectic
requires some intervention, I have striven to let the critics tell their own stories, whence the extensive quoting of exact original
wording, as opposed to summarising into my own wording. I know of no other book constructed by this method, except my own later
volume on Linguistic Theory.
Of course, I had to make many decisions in selecting, organizing, and grouping their ideas systematically. My choice of critics is
rather arbitrary. Due to the space and effort needed to deal with a critic in proper detail, I had to omit encounters with many I would
have wanted to include: Meyer Abrams, Roland Barthes, Simone de Beauvoir. Wayne Booth, Kenneth Burke, Stanley Cavell,
Umberto Eco, Stanley Fish, Michel Foucault, Lucien Goldmann, Barbara Herrnstein-Smith, Roman Ingarden, Barbara Johnson,
Murray Krieger, Julia Kristeva, Georg Lukcs, Jurii Lotrnan,. Hillis Miller, Georges Poulet, Paul Ricocur, Michael Riffaterre, Louise
Rosenblatt, I.A. Richards, Edward Said, Jean Starobinski, Tzvetan Todorov, Hayden White, and so forth. Even so, its a long book by
industry standards.
Nor was there any truly compelling logic for ordering the chapters I did include. It seemed reasonable to start with the founders
(Wellek, Frye, Fiedler); proceed to the (then) Konstanz theorists of reading or 'aesthetics of reception' (Iser, Jauss); adjoin the three
psychological or psychoanalytic critics (Holland, Bleich, Paris): the (then) Yale bouquet (de Man, Bloom Hartman) ushered in by
Cullers Michelin Guide to deconstruction (Derrida scolded me for calling it that); and the two feminists Millett and Irigaray. But in
almost all cases, the individual critics in these groups may be miles apart in theory or method. And there was no logical place at all to
put Hirsch (insert your own joke here). If you appreciate irony (a rhetorical drift admit I am wholly unable to shed), you will see the
point of ending with Irigaray, who foresees the end of discourse as we know it.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This project was made possible by the generous funding of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, which released
me for research during the academic year 1984-85, for which I would like to express my gratitude again here. I am also indebted to
the institutions where I had the opportunity to present and discuss the ideas developed in this book: Stanford and Carnegie-Mellon
Universities; the Universities of Maryland (College Park), Minnesota (Minneapolls), Vienna, London, and Amsterdam, as well as
Bielefeld and Siegen (Germany); the Summer Institute of Semiotics at Indiana University (Bloomington); the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem; the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (Budapest); the Technical University of Berlin; the Federal University of Pernambuco
(Brazil); and the State Universities of New York and New Mexico. Most recently, I have profited from lively interchange here with the
members of the Crump Institute for Medical Engineering at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Further, I wish to thank the indulgent critics for responding to my sketches: Ren Wellek, Northrop Frye, Leslie Fiedler, Don Hirsch,
Wolfgang Iser, Norm Holland, David Bleich, Bernie Paris, Jonathan Culler, Harold Bloom, H.R. Jauss, and Fredric Jameson. Jauss,
Holland, and Paris wrote especially detailed reactions. I was also stimulated by discussions of various ideas with Siegfried J. Schmidt,
Teun van Diik, J. Hillis Miller, Stanley Fish, Michael Halliday, Luiz Antonio Marcuschi, Jerorne Harste, Roland Posner, Alastair
Duckworth, Barbara Herrnstein-Smith, Michel Grimaud, Paul Garvin, and my understanding and capable directors at the University of
Florida and UCLA, Mel New and Gene Yates. Finally, I am inestimably indebted to Waiter J. Johnson for his continuing support of my
(to put it mildly) unconventional books, which were published without having peer reviewers peeing all over them.

GRAPHIC CONVENTIONS
To conserve space in the text, references to works by the sample critics are made with abbreviations listed below. Also, Note I to
each chapter provides a key. References to other works are done with author and date; where relevant, the original publication date
follows in square brackets. A reference is not shown when it is identical with the one just before it, and may thus he shared by a whole
series of quotes.
To avoid brackets or spaced periods, I set each part of a quote in its own quotation marks; I apologise for the cluttered look, which
was not improved by the US printing conventions of double quote () over single quote (), which would have been horrendously hard
to change now because my HP scanner interchanges them.
I have also allowed myself minor changes of word-forms, mostly in the person and tense of verbs or the endings of nouns, but
none I felt would change the meaning or intention of the quote. 'Emphasis added' and 'emphasis deleted" are given as "e.a." and
"e.d." Otherwise, all italics are those of the original source.
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Variations in spelling, ("aesthetic vs esthetic, hypostasize" vs 'hypostatize," etc.) were unified unless special distinctions were
involved. Non-English characters like or appear only as far as stingy FrontPage allows them; others are unpredictable, depending
on the version of your programs, and I used conventional characters, thinking that Sklovskij" and Mukarovsky are still better than,
say, &klovsky" and Muka$ovsk%,
References to authors, readers, and so on by masculine pronouns, which we now regard as sexist, are too prevalent in my
sources to eliminate altogether, though I reduced them considerably.
Since webpages have no page breaks, the footnotes were moved to the point where they are signalled. The result may be choppy
in the middle of the sentence; if you read the footnotes (and some contain important comments or reservations) you might have to go
back and reread the start of the sentence. Sorry! Of course, I could have bookmarked or hyperlinked them, but that would probably
keep them from getting read at all, and horribly cluttered up my website.

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