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Language Alone: The Critical Fetish of Modernity
 
 
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Language Alone: The Critical Fetish of Modernity [Paperback]

Geoffrey Galt Harpham (Author)

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Book Description

September 8, 2002 0415942195 978-0415942195
In Language Alone , Geoffrey Halt Harpham provides at once the most comprehensive survey and most telling critique of the pervasive role of language in modern thought. He shows how thinkers in such diverse fields as philosophy, psychoanalysis, anthropology and literary theory have made progress by referring their most difficult theoretical problems to what they presumed were the facts of language. Through a provocative reassessment of major thinkers on the idea of language - Saussure, Wittgenstein, Derrida, Rorty and Chomsky, among them - and detailed accounts of the discourses of ethics and ideology in particular, Harpham demonstrates a remarkable consensus among intellectuals of the past century and beyond that philosophical and other problems can be best understood as linguistic problems. Conspicuously absent from this consensus, he shows, is any consideration of contemporary linguistics, or any awareness of the growing agreement among linguists that the nature of language as such cannot be known. Ultimately, Harpham argues, the thought of language has dominated modern intellectual history because of its singular capacity to serve as proxy for a host of concerns, questions, and anxieties - our place in the order of things, our rights and obligations, our nature or essence - that resist a strictly rational formulation. Language Alone will interest critics, philosophers, and anyone with an interest in the uses of languages in contemporary thought.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Geoffrey Galt Harpham's new book is based on a simple insight, whose consequences have never before been so brilliantly drawn. Noting that there is no consensus about the meaning of Language as Such--indeed, that there is a bewildering variety of competing claims about its alleged essence--he challenges all of the philosophical, literary, and political efforts made to turn language into a foundational model for other aspects of the human condition. The rumbling you hear in the background as you read this remarkable book is the sound of a paradigm shifting. -- Martin Jay, University of California, Berkeley

About the Author

Geoffrey Galt Harpham is Professor of English at Tulane University. His many books include On the Grotesque, The Ascetic Imperative in Culture and Criticism, Getting It Right: Language, Literature, and Ethics, One of Us: The Mastery of Joseph Conrad, and Shadows of Ethics: Criticism and the Just Society.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
If the cultural and intellectual life of a century could be expressed in a sentence, then a leading candidate for that honor, as far as the twentieth century in the West is concerned, is the following from Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations: "And to imagine a language means to imagine a form of life" (1997: I 19: 8). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
language faculty, ethical law
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Roy Harris, Raymond Williams, Ernesto Laclau, Julia Kristeva, Philosophical Investigations, Roland Barthes, Stuart Hall, Terry Eagleton, The Prison Notebooks, Bernard Williams, Edward Said, Martin Jay, Maurice Blanchot, Paul Ricoeur
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