Literature, Theory, and Common Sense
By (Author) Antoine Compagnon
Translated by Carol Cosman
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
5th October 2004
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
801
Hardback
232
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
482g
In the late-20th century, the common sense approach to literature was deemed naive. Roland Barthes proclaimed the death of the author, and Hillis Miller declared that all interpretation is theoretical. In many a literature department, graduate students spent far more time on Derrida and Foucault thatn on Shakespeare and Milton. Despite this, common sense approaches to literature - including the belief that literature represents reality and authorial intentions matter - have resisted theory with tenacity. As a result, argues Antoine Compagnon, theorists have gone to extremes, boxed themselves into paradoxes and distanced others from their ideas. Assessing the accomplishments and failings of literary theory, Compagnon ultimately defends the mthods and goals of a theoretical commitment tempered by the wisdom of common sense. While it constitutes an engaging introduction to recent theoretical debates, the book is organized not by school of thought but around seven central questions: literariness, the author, the world, the reader, style, history and value. What makes a work of literature Does fiction imitate reality Is the readerpresent in the text What constitutes style Is the context in which a work is written important to its apprehension Are literary values universal As he examines how theory has wrestled these themes, Compagnon estabalishes not a simple middle-ground but a state of productive tension between high theory and common sense.
"Like everything that Antoine Compagnon writes, [this book] is intelligent, oblique, ironic, surprising the reader with unexpected shifts and reversals. It may annoy both theorists and the advocates of common sense, but if they surrender to their annoyance, they will have missed the point."--Terence Cave, Times Literary Supplement
Antoine Compagnon is Blanche W. Knopf Professor of French and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and Professor of Literature at the Sorbonne.