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Figures of a Changing World offers a dramatic new account of
cultural change, an account based on the distinction between two
familiar rhetorical figures, metonymy and metaphor. The book treats
metonymy as the basic organizing trope of traditional culture and
metaphor as the basic organizing trope of modern culture. On the
one hand, metonymies present themselves as analogies that
articulate or reaffirm preexisting states of affairs. They are
guarantors of facticity, a term that can be translated or defined
as fact-like-ness. On the other hand, metaphors challenge the
similarity they claim to establish, in order to feature departures
from preexisting states of affairs. On the basis of this
distinction, the author argues that metaphor and metonymy can be
used as instruments both for the large-scale interpretation of
tensions in cultural change and for the micro-interpretation of
tensions within particular texts. In addressing the functioning of
the two terms, the author draws upon and critiques the work of
Friedrich Nietzsche, Roman Jakobson, Christian Metz, Paul Ricoeur,
Umberto Eco, Edmund Leach, and Paul de Man.
Shakespeare's two Venetian plays are dominated by the discourse of
embarrassment. The Merchant of Venice is a comedy of embarrassment,
and Othello is a tragedy of embarrassment. This nomenclature is
admittedly anachronistic, because the term "embarrassment" didn't
enter the language until the late seventeenth century. To embarrass
is to make someone feel awkward or uncomfortable, humiliated or
ashamed. Such feelings may respond to specific acts of criticism,
blame, or accusation. "To embarrass" is literally to "embar": to
put up a barrier or deny access. The bar of embarrassment may be
raised by unpleasant experiences. It may also be raised when people
are denied access to things, persons, and states of being they
desire or to which they feel entitled. The Venetian plays represent
embarrassment not merely as a condition but as a weapon and as the
wound the weapon inflicts. Characters in The Merchant of Venice and
Othello devote their energies to embarrassing one another. But even
when the weapon is sheathed, it makes its presence felt, as when
Desdemona means to praise Othello and express her love for him: "I
saw Othello's visage in his mind" (1.3.253). This suggests, among
other things, that she didn't see it in his face.
With characteristic wit, Harry Berger, Jr., brings his flair for
close reading to texts and images across two millennia that
illustrate what he calls "structural misanthropology." Beginning
with a novel reading of Plato, Berger emphasizes Socrates's
self-acknowledged failures. The dialogues, he shows, offer up, only
to dispute, a misanthropic polis. The Athenian city-state, they
worry, is founded on a social order motivated by apprehension-both
the desire to take and the fear of being taken. In addition to
suggesting new political and philosophical dimensions to Platonic
thought, Berger's attention to rhetorical practice offers novel
ways of parsing the dialogic method itself. In the book's second
half, Berger revisits and revises his earlier accounts of Italian
humanism, Elizabethan drama, and Dutch painting. Berger shows how
structural misanthropology helps us to read the competitive
practices that characterize Renaissance writing and art, whether in
Machiavelli's constitutional prostheses, Shakespeare's pageants of
humiliation, or the elbow jabs of Dutch portraiture.
Berger describes himself as "a reconstructed old New Critic," and
his publications over the past fifty years have centered on
investigations of the ways in which texts represent both themselves
and their situations of utterance. The thirteen chapters of the
present book illustrate the range of his inquiry across several
cultures and disciplines. They also demonstrate the interpretive
richness, the theoretical acumen, and the energetic prose that
characterize the work of one of America's premier "close readers."
Situated Utterances is divided into four parts. In Part One Berger
designs an analytical model of New Criticism and shows how it was
dismantled during the decades after the Second World War. He then
proposes a reconstructed model in which the practice of ironic and
suspicious "close reading" may be directed toward interactions
among bodies, texts, and countertexts in different cultural
settings. Part Two demonstrates this practice in studies of
specific works in three genres: the pastoral Idylls of Theocritus,
Edmund Spenser's epic, The Faerie Queene, and the Diaries of Samuel
Pepys. The scope of the practice is broadened in Part Three to the
connection between cultural representations and institutional
change, a connection explored in four chapters that successively
examine precapitalist forms of representation, the Old Testament,
Beowulf, and the conflict between nakedness and nudity in Christian
conceptions of the body. Part Four consists in three chapters on
Plato's dialogues, which Berger interprets as critical of the
general situation of utterance in a predominantly oral culture. He
argues that Plato uses the resources of writing to depict the
heroic pathos of a Socrates whose method and message are defeated
by the politics of the oral medium. Situated Utterances concludes
with "A Conspectus of Critical Moves: The Eleven-Step Program."
This is a summary account of the interpretive strategies put into
play by the author throughout his long career.
"The Absence of Grace" is a study of male fantasy, representation
anxiety, and narratorial authority in two sixteenth-century books,
Baldassare Castiglione's "Il libro del Cortegiano" (1528) and
Giovanni Della Casa's "Galateo" (1558). The interpretive method is
a form of close reading the author describes as reconstructed old
New Criticism, that is, close reading conditioned by an interest in
and analysis of the historical changes reflected in the text. The
book focuses on the way the "Courtier" and "Galateo" cope with and
represent the interaction between changes of elite culture and the
changing construction of masculine identity in early modern Europe.
More specifically, it connects questions of male fantasy and
masculine identity to questions about the authority and reliability
of narrators, and shows how these questions surface in narratorial
attitudes toward socioeconomic rank or class, political power, and
gender.
The book is in three parts. Part One examines a distinction and
correlation the "Courtier" establishes between two key terms, (1)
"sprezzatura, " defined as a behavioral skill intended to simulate
the attributes of (2) "grazia, " understood as the grace and
privileges of noble birth. Because "sprezzatura" is negatively
conceptualized as the absence of grace it generates anxiety and
suspicion in performers and observers alike. In order to suggest
how the binary opposition between these terms affected the
discourse of manners, the author singles out the titular episode of
"Galateo, " an anecdote about table manners, which he reads closely
and then sets in its historical perspective. Part Two takes up the
question of "sprezzatura" in the gender debate that develops in
Book 3 of the "Courtier, " and Part Three explores in detail the
characterization of the two narrators in the "Courtier" and
"Galateo, " who are represented as unreliable and an object of
parody or critique.
"The Absence of Grace" is a study of male fantasy, representation
anxiety, and narratorial authority in two sixteenth-century books,
Baldassare Castiglione's "Il libro del Cortegiano" (1528) and
Giovanni Della Casa's "Galateo" (1558). The interpretive method is
a form of close reading the author describes as reconstructed old
New Criticism, that is, close reading conditioned by an interest in
and analysis of the historical changes reflected in the text. The
book focuses on the way the "Courtier" and "Galateo" cope with and
represent the interaction between changes of elite culture and the
changing construction of masculine identity in early modern Europe.
More specifically, it connects questions of male fantasy and
masculine identity to questions about the authority and reliability
of narrators, and shows how these questions surface in narratorial
attitudes toward socioeconomic rank or class, political power, and
gender.
The book is in three parts. Part One examines a distinction and
correlation the "Courtier" establishes between two key terms, (1)
"sprezzatura, " defined as a behavioral skill intended to simulate
the attributes of (2) "grazia, " understood as the grace and
privileges of noble birth. Because "sprezzatura" is negatively
conceptualized as the absence of grace it generates anxiety and
suspicion in performers and observers alike. In order to suggest
how the binary opposition between these terms affected the
discourse of manners, the author singles out the titular episode of
"Galateo, " an anecdote about table manners, which he reads closely
and then sets in its historical perspective. Part Two takes up the
question of "sprezzatura" in the gender debate that develops in
Book 3 of the "Courtier, " and Part Three explores in detail the
characterization of the two narrators in the "Courtier" and
"Galateo, " who are represented as unreliable and an object of
parody or critique.
This collection of essays includes some of the most recent work of
a master critic at the height of his powers. Of the fourteen
essays, written from the late 1970's to the present, three have
never before been published; the essays' appearance in a single
volume makes available for the first time the full scope of
Berger's unique approach to ethical discourses in Shakespeare's
plays. The sequence of essays displays both the continuity and the
revisionary development that mark his critical practice since the
early work on "The Tempest," "Troilus and Cressida," and the
Elizabethan theater.
When one compares Berger's earlier work from the 1960's with the
writing from the 1980's and 1990's in the present collection, one
sees that the difference stems primarily from the impact on the
later work of his encounters with the whole range of structuralist
and poststructuralist theory. Much of the excitement and vitality
of Berger's current work comes from his efforts to incorporate new
methodological influences into his previous system. Because he
comes to poststructuralism as a mature critic whose larger
interpretive framework is already in place, his response is not
simply to immerse himself in the new theoretical modes and adopt
them wholesale, but rather to make them his own.
Among the plays discussed are "The Merchant of Venice," "Much Ado
About Nothing," "King Lear," "Macbeth," "2 Henry IV," "Richard
II"--and, in two of the new essays, "1 Henry IV" and "Measure for
Measure." Also new is Berger's retrospective account of his
critical development in the extensive opening "Acknowledgments."
Caterpillage is a study of seventeenth-century Dutch still life
painting. It develops an interpretive approach based on the
author's previous studies of portraiture, and its goal is to offer
its readers a new way to think and talk about the genre of still
life. The book begins with a critique of iconographic discourse and
particularly of iconography's treatment of vanitas symbolism. It
goes on to argue that this treatment tends to divert attention from
still life's darker meanings and from the true character of its
traffic with death. Interpretations of still life that focus on the
vanity of human experience and the mutability of life minimize the
impact made by the representation of such voracious pillagers of
plant life as insects, snails, and caterpillars. The message sent
by still life's preoccupation with these small-scale predators is
not merely vanitas. It is rapacitas. Caterpillage also explores the
impact of this message on the meaning of the genre's French name.
We use the conventional term nature morte ("dead nature") without
giving any thought to how misleading it is. Because so many
portrayals of still life involve cut flowers, which, although still
in bloom, are dying, it would be more accurate to name the genre
nature mourant. The subjects of still life are plants that are
still living, plants that are dying but not yet dead.
Spenser is a delirious poet. He can't plough straight. What he
builds is shiftier, twistier, than anything dreamed up or put down
by M. C. Escher. So begins Resisting Allegory, in which the leading
Spenser critic of our time sums up a lifelong commitment to the
theory and practice of textual interpretation. Spenser's great poem
provides the occasion for a searching and comprehensive
interdisciplinary exploration of reading practices3/4those the
author advocates as well as those he adapts or criticizes in
entertaining a wide range of critical arguments with his celebrated
combination of intellectual generosity and rigorous questioning.
Berger is interested in how details of the poem's language-phrases,
images, figures on which we haven't put enough interpretive
pressure-disconcert traditional interpretations and big discourses
that the poem has often been thought to serve. Central to this
volume is an attention to the deployment of gender in conjunction
with the Berger's notion of narrative complicity. Resisting
Allegory offers a model of theoretically sophisticated criticism
that never wavers in its close attention to the text. Berger offers
a sustained and brilliantly articulated resistance not only to
allegory, as the title indicates, but also to prevalent modes of
cultural and historical criticism. As in all of Berger's books, a
lucid reflection on questions of method-based on a profound and
richly theoretically informed understanding of the workings of
language and of the historical situations of the people involved in
it-are interwoven with an interpretive practice that serves as an
exemplary pedagogical model. Berger attends to historical and
political context while deeply respecting the ways in which text
can never be reduced to context. This distinctive and original book
makes clear the scope and coherence of the critical vision
elaborated Berger has elaborated in a lifetime of seminal and
still-challenging critical arguments.
Theory for Ethnomusicology: Histories, Conversations, Insights,
Second Edition, is a foundational work for courses in
ethnomusicological theory. The book examines key intellectual
movements and topic areas in social and cultural theory, and
explores the way they have been taken up in ethnomusicological
research. New co-author Harris M. Berger and Ruth M. Stone
investigate the discipline's past, present, and future, reflecting
on contemporary concerns while cataloging significant developments
since the publication of the first edition in 2008. A dozen
contributors approach a broad range of theoretical topics alive in
ethnomusicology. Each chapter examines ethnographic and historical
works from within ethnomusicology, showcasing the unique
contributions scholars in the field have made to wider,
transdisciplinary dialogs, while illuminating the field's relevance
and pointing the way toward new horizons of research. New to this
edition: Every chapter in the book is completely new, with richer
and more comprehensive discussions. New chapters have been added on
gender and sexuality, sound and voice studies, performance and
critical improvisation studies, and theories of participation. New
text boxes and notes make connections among the chapters,
emphasizing points of contact and conflict among intellectual
movements.
Harrying considers Richard III and the four plays of Shakespeare's
Henriad-Richard II, Henry IV Part 1, Henry IV Part 2, and Henry V.
Berger combines close reading with cultural analysis to show how
the language characters speak always says more than the speakers
mean to say. Shakespeare's speakers try to say one thing. Their
language says other things that often question the speakers'
motives or intentions. Harrying explores the effect of this
linguistic mischief on the representation of all the Henriad's
major figures. It centers attention on the portrayal of Falstaff
and on the bad faith that darkens the language and performance of
Harry, the Prince of Wales who becomes King Henry V.
Harrying considers Richard III and the four plays of Shakespeare's
Henriad-Richard II, Henry IV Part 1, Henry IV Part 2, and Henry V.
Berger combines close reading with cultural analysis to show how
the language characters speak always says more than the speakers
mean to say. Shakespeare's speakers try to say one thing. Their
language says other things that often question the speakers'
motives or intentions. Harrying explores the effect of this
linguistic mischief on the representation of all the Henriad's
major figures. It centers attention on the portrayal of Falstaff
and on the bad faith that darkens the language and performance of
Harry, the Prince of Wales who becomes King Henry V.
Crowning six decades of literary, rhetorical, and historical
scholarship, Harry Berger, Jr., offers readers another trenchant
reading. Berger subverts the usual interpretations of Plato's kalos
kagathos, showing Socrates to be trapped in a double ventriloquism,
tethered to his interlocutors' speech acts even as they are
tethered to his. Plato's Republic and Protagoras both reserve a
small but significant place for a poet who differs from Homer and
Hesiod: the lyric poet Simonides of Ceos. In the Protagoras,
Socrates takes apart a poem attributed to Simonides and uses this
to finish off the famous and supposedly dangerous sophist,
Protagoras. Couch City is a close reading of the comic procedures
Socrates deploys against Protagoras as he reduces him to silence.
But it also shows that Socrates takes the danger posed by
Protagoras and his fellow sophists seriously. Even if they are
represented as buffoons, sophists are among the charismatic
authority figures-poets, rhapsodes, seers, orators, and
lawgivers-who promote views harmful to Athenian democracy. Socrates
uses Simonides's poem to show how sophists not only practice
misinterpretation but are unable to defend against it. Berger ports
his roots as a pioneering literary theorist into this rhetorical
discussion, balancing ideas such as speech-act theory with
hard-nosed philology. The result is a provocative and
counterintuitive reassessment of Plato's engagement with democracy.
A study of the theory and practice of seventeenth-century Dutch
group portraits, Manhood, Marriage, and Mischief offers an account
of the genre’s comic and ironic features, which it treats as
comments on the social context of portrait sitters who are husbands
and householders as well as members of civic and proto-military
organizations. The introduction picks out anomalous touches with
which Rembrandt problematizes standard group-portrait motifs in The
Night Watch: a shooter who fires his musket into the company; two
girls who appear to be moving through the company in the wrong
direction; guardsmen who appear to be paying little or no attention
to their leader’s enthusiastic gesture of command. Were the
patrons and sitters aware of or even complicit in staging the
anomalies? If not, did the painter get away with a subversive
parody of militia portrait conventions at the sitters’ expense?
Parts One and Two respond to these questions at several levels:
first, by analyzing the aesthetic structure of group portraiture as
a genre; second, by reviewing the conflicting accounts modern
scholars give of the civic guard company as an institution; third,
by marking the effect on civic guardsmen of a mercantile economy
that relied heavily on wives and mothers to keep the homefires
burning. Two phenomena persistently recur in the portraits under
discussion: competitive posing and performance anxiety. Part Three
studies these phenomena in portraits of married couples and
families. Finally, Part Four examines them in The Night Watch in
the light of the first three parts. The result is an interpretation
that reads Rembrandt’s painting both as a deliberate parody by
the sitters and as the artist’s covert parody of the sitters.
The foundational question this book explores is: What happens when
portraits are interpreted as imitations or likenesses not only of
individuals but also of their acts of posing--when the observer's
attention is redirected so that the primary object the portrait
imitates becomes the likeness not of a person but of an act, the
act of sitting for one's portrait? This shift of attention involves
another: from the painter's to the sitter's part in the act of
(self-)portrayal.
At the ground level, "Fictions of the Pose" develops a hypothesis
about the structure and meaning of portraiture. That foundation
supports a first story devoted to the practices and politics of
early modern Italian and Dutch portraiture and a second story
devoted to Rembrandt's self-portraits, especially those in which he
poses in fancy dress as if he were a patron. The author approaches
the Rembrandt/Renaissance relation not as an art historian but as
an interpreter trained in literary studies, taunted by the
challenge of extending the practice of "close reading" from verbal
to visual media and fascinated by the way this practice can show
how individual works "talk back" to their contexts. The context for
Rembrandt, the object and target of his "looking-glass theater," is
the structure of patron/painter relations that developed during the
Renaissance and influenced the very different conditions of
patronage that emerged in the Dutch Republic around the turn of the
seventeenth century.
The book is in four parts. Parts One and Two comprise an
interpretive study of the technical and sociopolitical conditions
within which portraiture becomes an important if problematic medium
of self-representation in early modern Europe. The major portion of
these two sections considers the structure and the consequences of
a system of practices and conventions that governs poses in
commissioned portraits. In Part Three the scene shifts from Italian
to Dutch portraiture. Part Four is devoted to self-portraits by
Rembrandt that are interpreted as responses to the conditions
depicted in the first three parts. Through a series of close
readings of individual works, the author demonstrates the ironic,
polemical, and political force of Rembrandt's self-portraits.
A study of the theory and practice of seventeenth-century Dutch
group portraits, Manhood, Marriage, and Mischief offers an account
of the genre's comic and ironic features, which it treats as
comments on the social context of portrait sitters who are husbands
and householders as well as members of civic and proto-military
organizations. The introduction picks out anomalous touches with
which Rembrandt problematizes standard group-portrait motifs in The
Night Watch: a shooter who fires his musket into the company; two
girls who appear to be moving through the company in the wrong
direction; guardsmen who appear to be paying little or no attention
to their leader's enthusiastic gesture of command. Were the patrons
and sitters aware of or even complicit in staging the anomalies? If
not, did the painter get away with a subversive parody of militia
portrait conventions at the sitters' expense? Parts One and Two
respond to these questions at several levels: first, by analyzing
the aesthetic structure of group portraiture as a genre; second, by
reviewing the conflicting accounts modern scholars give of the
civic guard company as an institution; third, by marking the effect
on civic guardsmen of a mercantile economy that relied heavily on
wives and mothers to keep the homefires burning. Two phenomena
persistently recur in the portraits under discussion: competitive
posing and performance anxiety. Part Three studies these phenomena
in portraits of married couples and families. Finally, Part Four
examines them in The Night Watch in the light of the first three
parts. The result is an interpretation that reads Rembrandt's
painting both as a deliberate parody by the sitters and as the
artist's covert parody of the sitters.
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