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Matthew Rampley's avatar

This is on the ball. As an academic in the humanities I find it tedious when authors say that they are writing "against the grain" when they are, in fact, themselves the grain. Or when, since the idea of the avant-garde is a museum relic, they write of "advanced art."

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Michael's avatar

Interesting that the real meat and potatoes of the piece is relegated to a footnote:

"Nowadays, the whole episode reads like a letter from another world. It is rare in contemporary academia for scholars in the humanities to make such pointed critiques of their colleagues’ work. There is a bunker mentality, and not without reason."

The problem with "critical theory" began when what was a purely "textual" exercise in philosophy-linguistics-historiography was turned into a faux-analysis of "the real world".

Comparing the solipsistic inanities of so much of what passes for "critical theory" in contemporary academia to the work of writers like Derrida and Foucault is like putting a crayoned "My Fambly" drawing from a kindergarten class beside a Goya and saying "Discuss".

When impenetrable theoretical maundering about "gender" moves off the page into clinics where teenaged girls get "trendy" double mastectomies, you have to acknowledge that the problem is not with the "theory" but with its uses and abuses for life.

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