Available Formats
Fiction, Philosophy and Literary Theory: Will the Real Saul Kripke Please Stand Up
By (Author) Professor Christopher Norris
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
28th June 2007
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary theory
801
Paperback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
420g
This book brings together three main topics - deconstruction, philosophy of language, and literary theory - that have figured centrally in Christopher Norris's work over the past two decades. It offers a refreshingly clear and vigorous statement of his views as to how theory' might profit from a greater awareness of current philosophical debates while philosophy might likewise gain by adopting a more open-minded attitude toward developments in literary theory. Most significant here is Norris's continuing exploration of the various points of contact between Jacques Derrida's thought and the kinds of concern - especially with issues in philosophical semantics and speech-act theory - that have preoccupied thinkers in the other', mainstream-analytic line of descent. However his focus is consistently on matters that should be of interest to philosophers and literary theorists alike.
Thus Norris devotes some penetrating commentary to topics such as modal or possible-worlds' logic as it bears upon issues in narrative theory; the two cultures' (science versus literature) controversy; the different ways in which literary theory has alternately embraced and rejected the appeal to scientific' modes of analysis; and some possible reasons for Wittgenstein's well-known aversion to Shakespeare. He also suggests a novel approach to the free-will/determinism issue by way of debates about the nature of language and the scope it affords for expressive creativity despite - or owing to - the limits imposed by various structural constraints.
Altogether this important new book provides a welcome overview of the author's current thinking and an equally welcome enlargement of horizons in contrast to the narrowly specialised character of much present-day academic discourse.
"Norris has provided a highly elaborate yet consummately clear reflection regarding the intersections between philosophy and literary theory... His book is a welcome contribution for scholars and advanced students interested in rethinking the supposed analytic-Continental divide. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students and faculty/researchers." -CHOICE -- M. A. Martinez-Saenz
Christopher Norris is Distinguished Research Professor in Philosophy at the University of Cardiff, Wales, and has taught at many universities in India, Australia, Greece, Spain, Germany, Canada, China, the US, and elsewhere. He is the author of numerous books on aspects of philosophy, critical theory, and modern intellectual history.