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SHAKSPER 2007: Presentism
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@SHAKSPER.NET) Date: 12/08/07
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 18.0820 Saturday, 8 December 2007 [1] From: Martin Mueller <martinmueller@northwestern.edu> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 09:26:58 -0600 Subj: Absentism [2] From: Carol Barton <cbartonphd1@verizon.net> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 10:38:18 -0500 Subj: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [3] From: Clay H. Shevlin <chshevlin@sbcglobal.net> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 07:57:52 -0800 Subj: RE: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [4] From: Anthony Burton <aburton1@comcast.net> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 11:19:23 -0500 Subj: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [5] From: Larry Weiss <larry@lweiss.net> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 11:53:00 -0500 Subj: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [6] From: William Godshalk <godshawl@email.uc.edu> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 15:30:56 -0500 Subj: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [7] From: Joseph Egert <tregej@yahoo.com> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 13:06:11 -0800 (PST) Subj: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [8] From: William Godshalk <godshawl@email.uc.edu> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 21:57:32 -0500 Subj: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [9] From: R. A. Cantrell <racant@gmail.com> Date: Thursday, 6 Dec 2007 06:01:34 -0600 Subj: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism [1]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: Martin Mueller <martinmueller@northwestern.edu> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 09:26:58 -0600 Subject: Absentism I vividly recall a memo sent many years by the president of a university I was then teaching at, informing the faculty that his chief of staff had resigned effective this morning. The most striking thing about this terse letter was the absence of any of the things one usually finds in such memos. There was clearly more to this story, although I never bothered to find out what it was. What is not said is a very powerful part of "everyday hermeneutics," the whole bundle of procedures by which we try to make sense of what is going on. Literary hermeneutics is a special case of everyday hermeneutics, and there is every reason to attend to what is not there. Ascham in The Schoolmaster has a lovely passage about comparing Cicero with Demosthenes or Vergil with Homer, and he urges his student to ask: "Why did Tully leave out this passage?" As an instance of intentional acts by some human(s), a play, including a play by Shakespeare, is an aggregate of choices to do this rather than that and to it this way rather than that way. I have never thought much of a conspiratorial hermeneutics that treats a text as a cover-up to be exposed. Hermeneutical rules that work well in present day Washington and probably served you well at the Roman or Elizabethan court may not work well with the representations of such (or more innocent) worlds. But attending to what is not said and asking why it is not said is often a terrific tool for finding out things about a text, provided you keep in mind the hermeneutical rule that the simplest interpretation is often the best: it is not there because it did not matter. Absentism, then, is a wonderful method. It is also very old. [2]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: Carol Barton <cbartonphd1@verizon.net> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 10:38:18 -0500 Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism If I may briefly enter into this latest fray on the side of the historicists, it seems to me that this discussion continuously mixes apples with oranges in an attempt to produce chimpanzees. Like most of the other literary theories (including historicism), the problem with presentism as argued here is that it insists on its own universality (i.e. on its panacetic ability to apply to at all times to all people and all things in all situations and contexts). It doesn't. It is a useful construct when we are discussing Shakespeare, about whom we know so very little, because it makes us conscious of the fact that he lived in another place and time, and because of his different world-view, may have "meant" things differently than we interpret them. It loses its potency as an interpretive tool when we're dealing with a Milton, about whom we know so much--and, I would argue, about whose "intent" we can make more reasonable conjecture. That sense of "knowing" a writer, especially one who is polemicist and prolific correspondent as well as poet and statesman, is enhanced the longer one studies him, just as one comes to "know" a living person better and better the longer he or she interacts with the individual. After 30-odd years of marriage to him, I think that in most instances, I (and others who have studied his canon and his biographical and state materials for a lifetime) can reasonably claim to know what Milton "meant"--even when he's being cagey or disingenuous--and I think Joe and Nicole are arguing against presentism's dismissal of that knowledge claim. Bill Godshalk is unable to transport himself into another era--just as some people are incapable of visualizing the way a wallpaper pattern would look in an entire room, or of mentally "tasting" a proposed combination of foods or spices without doing so in reality. (Quick: do you want some cinnamon on your onions?) That doesn't give him the right to dismiss that ability in the rest of us. The point is, the more facts we can gather about a specific individual--even one at three or four centuries' remove--the more we can come to "know" him or her (as much as we can "know" anyone). We have very little of a truly personal nature to go on regarding William Shakespeare--whom and what did he love, whom and what did he hate, what did he like to do when he wasn't writing plays, where was his favorite place to work, what were his politics, religion, issues, and so on? It's harder to make a definitive knowledge claim about what he "meant" than it is to do so in the case of someone like Milton. We can't "get inside his mind" to the same degree, because he hasn't left us the tools that would make that possible. To that extent, it's important to remember that how we interpret his meaning may not be consistent with what he "meant." But we can also look at things like contemporary word usage, stylometrics, and the characteristics of the canon (e.g., he uses this word this way 192 times; what is the likelihood that his meaning in event #193 is something "other"?), and we can--to some degree--make a case where we see definite patterns. Pace Bill and Terry and John, we can never make that case with full certainty (any more than we can test Shakespeare's body's DNA to prove his identity): there is simply no "control," no referent against which the validity of such knowledge claims can be measured. But as Nicole and Joe have insisted on insisting, that *doesn't* mean there is no validity to a carefully researched and logically-founded educated guess. One is an argument of strict empiricism, and in its context, it's appropriate: the fact that both the pregnancy rate and the consumption of ice cream increase in the summer does not mean there's a causal effect between them. The other is an argument of empathetic intuition, what I believe based on what I know. Terry and Bill and John can tell me sternly that I don't know John Milton--that there's no way in the realm of logical possibility that I could even begin to think I know him, without traveling back in time--and they're right. On the other hand, after so many years of reading him and studying the world in which he lived, I feel that I know him better than any other human being I have ever encountered--and that he *wanted* future readers to know him--or, at least the intellect that his writings reveal--in precisely that way. I'm right, too. For that reason, the participants can carry this thread on into infinity, but those parallel lines are never going to meet. Seems to me the combatants should agree to disagree, or else acknowledge the validity of the other side's points without yielding the validity of their own. Otherwise, this is going to be "the song that never ends." Best to all, Carol Barton [3]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: Clay H. Shevlin <chshevlin@sbcglobal.net> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 07:57:52 -0800 Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: RE: SHK 18.0813 Presentism Presentism is oral relativism. Or a literary mobius strip. If you are inclined to favor the latter statement, and you do your homework, you will discover that presentism is the brainchild of M.C. Escher. Clay H. Shevlin [4]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: Anthony Burton <aburton1@comcast.net> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 11:19:23 -0500 Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism What I admire most about presentism is that it is so quaintly old- fashioned in its literal adoption of Shakespeare's words. That is to say, Cicero's, when he remarks to Casca "But men may construe things, after their fashion,/ Clean from the purpose of the things themselves." What I gain from presentism (when in danger of forgetting Shakespeare and his Cicero) is its persistent reminder of the need for me to be aware of my own "fashion", lest I import it -- more than my best efforts can overcome -- into my views about "things," such as literary texts (not to mention last week's news). What irks me most about presentism is the seeming confidence of its proponents that they are, like Monty Pythons without the humor, offering something completely different. I find instead that they are more often than not retailing ancient insights and producing the deadly opposite of Pope's "true wit", reporting Nature to disadvantage dressed, what oft was thought, and oft far better expressed. Tony B [5]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: Larry Weiss <larry@lweiss.net> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 11:53:00 -0500 Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism Ed Taft raises some interesting questions: >Why is Lear's wife absent? Why does the absent Falstaff >haunt _Henry V_? and what about those pesky children >of Lady Macbeth? More interesting, however, is Why did John Drakakis take Don's post seriously? [6]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: William Godshalk <godshawl@email.uc.edu> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 15:30:56 -0500 Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism Joe Egert wonders if I'm not burning a straw man. "No one here is denying our limitations in seeking the truth. The present sitz is merely one of many such obstacles--an elementary truism acknowledged by every competent scholar before and after Aurelius, but carried to a defeatist extreme by Hawkes and company." But, Joe, once you acknowledge the "limitations in seeking truth," that acknowledgement has certain consequences. That is, we believe that we know nothing for sure. If this belief leads to "cognitive defeatism" and reduces "scholarship to a mere groundless rhetorical exercise," then that's where it leads. Bill [7]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: Joseph Egert <tregej@yahoo.com> Date: Wednesday, 5 Dec 2007 13:06:11 -0800 (PST) Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism John Drakakis writes: "Perhaps we should leave Joe Egert to toil in the labyrinth of truth; when he gets to the centre he'll find, pace Derrida, that the centre is not the centre. Just make sure that you take a reel of cotton with you Joe, it'll help you when you are trying to get out!" JE: Frankly, John, it's a wonder you've emerged from your own self-refuting labyrinth long enough to edit Shakespeare and help others navigate theirs. Stay well, Joe Egert [8]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: William Godshalk <godshawl@email.uc.edu> Date: Wednesday, 05 Dec 2007 21:57:32 -0500 Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism >John Drakakis writes: "I'm afraid that Don Bloom's 'absentism' >just won't fly, partly because these plays aren't modern >naturalistic soap operas." John goes on to discuss what we >must not discuss and concludes: "All good novelistic stuff, but >misplaced." This sounds to my ear like an old-fashioned history professor telling us exactly what the past was like. John knows what Shakespeare's plays are -- or are not -- and there's an end on it. If this be presentism, I want no part of it. Bill [9]----------------------------------------------------------------- From: R. A. Cantrell <racant@gmail.com> Date: Thursday, 6 Dec 2007 06:01:34 -0600 Subject: 18.0813 Presentism Comment: Re: SHK 18.0813 Presentism >JE: I wonder, Bill, if you're not burning a straw man. No one here is >denying our limitations in seeking the truth. The present sitz is merely >one of many such obstacles--an elementary truism acknowledged by every >competent scholar before and after Aurelius, but carried to a defeatist >extreme by Hawkes and company. I've not yet reached Cantrell's point of >impugning their motives. The effect, however, of such cognitive >defeatism is much the same, i.e., reducing scholarship to a mere >groundless rhetorical exercise. You come near me now. I don't think that T. Hawkes has as a conscious motive the idiotizing of children, but he was once someone's child. This entire thread is, once again dear friends, a romp through the skeptical tropes. I'm weary of scolding my elders and betters for their ignorance of Formal Skepticism. Somebody younger and stronger than me; do something. _______________________________________________________________ S H A K S P E R: The Global Shakespeare Discussion List Hardy M. Cook, editor@shaksper.net The S H A K S P E R Web Site <http://www.shaksper.net> DISCLAIMER: Although SHAKSPER is a moderated discussion list, the opinions expressed on it are the sole property of the poster, and the editor assumes no responsibility for them.
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