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Permanence and Change: An Anatomy of Purpose, Third edition, With new Afterword. [Paperback]

Kenneth Burke (Author)
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: University of California Press; 3 edition (May 23, 1984)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0520041461
  • ISBN-13: 978-0520041462
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #88,950 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A keystone work in the field of rhetoric and social theory, December 3, 2000
This review is from: Permanence and Change: An Anatomy of Purpose, Third edition, With new Afterword. (Paperback)
"Permanence and Change" was first published in 1935, revised in 1954 (which included the appendix "On Human Behavior Considered 'Dramatistically'") with an afterword "Permanence and Change: In Restrospective Prospect" added by Burke in 1984. This third edition also reprints Hugh Dalziel Duncan's introduction. This volume is the second in Burke's "first trilogy," which started with "Counter-Statement" and concluded with "Attitudes Toward History," and I should express my preference for these earlier works over the latter ("Rhetoric of Motives," etc.) because of their greater depth and breadth of conceptualization.

In "Permanence and Change" Burke establishes the ways in which "form" permeates society as much as it does the arts. Consequently, even when we look at forms are art we are not dealing exclusively with aesthetics, but with more rhetorical notions of form of which we should be aware. Part I "On Interpretation" works from Veblen's concept of "Trained Incapacity" to establish the connection between rationalization and orientation. This leads to the idea that motives are shorthand terms for situations, the interpretation of which are thwarted by the "occupational psychosis" of the individual. Here is where you get your best sense of Burke as providing a synthesis of Freud and Marx. Part II "Perspective by Incongruity" is perhaps the key section for me in all of Burke's writing, especially given the degree to which I embrace the concept. The goal of which is to create new meanings that are progressively more "real." Part III "The Basis of Simplification" advocates "the poetry of action" as the ideal conceptualization of the interpretive process. As always, the scope of Burke's use of evidence, both in the literary and critical worlds, is astounding. "Permanence and Change" is a key work in the field of rhetoric and social theory.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Permanence and Change - a cornerstone of literary theory, April 24, 2008
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This review is from: Permanence and Change: An Anatomy of Purpose, Third edition, With new Afterword. (Paperback)
Permanence and Change is not the easiest read but well worth any effort. Burke's style is delightful if discursive and occasionally digressive. He takes principles of pragmatism and develops them to where we are today and beyond, though he rarely gets credit for his prescience. With sensitivity and a level of literary cultivation too often missing from today's discussions, Burke illustrates how and why we interpret teleologically, how interpretation is shared by all conscious creatures and what makes humans so special in their use of language for survival. Together with its more awkward imperfect sequel, Attitudes Towards History, it gives us a picture of some of the deepest points of intellectual life in the politically engaged 1930's.
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5.0 out of 5 stars misfits that follow Nietzsche, January 12, 2012
By 
Bruce P. Barten (Saint Paul, MN United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Permanence and Change: An Anatomy of Purpose, Third edition, With new Afterword. (Paperback)
Getting a radical start on anything.

At the beginning of Kenneth Burke's book, Permanence and Change/An Anatomy of Purpose (1954, 1965, 1984), the orientation of critics is suspicious of how trained a critic should be:

one's very abilities can function as blindnesses. (p. 7).

I was so smart when I was young that I considered myself fully qualified to be radical at an early age. My father was a minister, but I considered most of the reasons given by Americans for considering themselves Christians part of the higher swindle that serve the scheme of social control of apple pie activities. I was still involved in a church while I was a student at the University of Michigan College of Engineering because singing in the church choir was a skill I enjoyed. I was not involved in any system of finance, as Burke makes a point about those in business:

Veblen generally restricts the concept
[of trained incapacity] to the case of
business men who, through long training
in competitive finance, have so built
their scheme of orientation about this kind
of effort and ambition that they cannot see
serious possibilities in any other system of
production and distribution. (p. 7).

Fight or flight is a range of options that lie behind Burke's discussion of escape as an activity or as a fate that can be applied to those who were:

always trying to escape from life
or avoid realities, (p. 8).

For social control, Christianity is often pictured as a humble way to behave. The meek shall inherit the earth when the tough guys wipe each other our or get wiped out by the wealthy. In literature:

the poets symbolized their resentment
in many ways;
and any kind of symbolization
that did not suit the critic's
particular preferences was
called an escape. (p. 8).

Karel Marx expected religion to be the opiate of the masses. People can be reasoning about their own rituals or rationalizing symbolic actions as representing what God intends to do even if the people who have gained control of traditional institutions raise new questions like David Koresh wondering at what age Jesus would turn children into mothers of new Branch Davidians. Association and transference are examined by Burke as a context for experiments that involve conditioning.

The entire experience of American culture as a sense of monstrosity clinging to marginal thinking for an electronic market in a global financial system that lacks anything that functions as money after being flooded by the gambling debts taking the form of deri9vative contracts on everything that can go up, down, or sideways in free markets ought to be covered by Part I, Chapter III, Occupational Psychosis. Just for an exercise in thinking, I would rather skip to a section on Nietzsche in Part II.

Glorifying the problematical in art was adopted by disciples of Nietzsche, but the art trips on itself if:

the compete establishment
of the problematical would make
glorification impossible. On the whole,
they all seized upon the same device:
stressing the state of tension in itself,
picturing the dangers and discomforts
involved in maintaining it, hence relying
upon the basic military equipment in man
as their last source of appeal (though differing
widely in their selection of the symbols
which would serve as the channels in which this
original biological psychosis would run). (pp. 87-88).

Nietzsche's later style is
like a sequence of darts.
Indeed, at first I tried to
explain it to myself as a
simple conversion of his
fighting, hunting attitude
into its behavioristic
equivalent. His sentences
are forever striking out at
this and that, exactly like
a man in the midst of game,
or enemies. They leap with
a continual abruptness and
sharpness of naming, which
seems to suggest nothing so
much as those saltations by
which cruising animals leap
upon their prey. (p. 88).

Burke thinks Nietzsche's style led him to the term "Perspective by Incongruity," (p. 88). Oswald Spengler grouped periods in various civilizations at times that included "as a culture decayed" (p. 89). The style of writing uses "the same constant reordering of categories that we find in Shakespearean metaphor." (p. 90). Somehow, in the host of:

new insights by such deliberate misfits.
The individualism of fiction and poetry
was mild as compared with the
individualism of science, ever in
quest of new ways for characterizing
and classifying events. (p. 91).

Consensus seeks a basis on which some thinkers can be considered more radical than others, but in a situation which is hopping back and forth like the finger finger end of a cosmic pogo stick up, each incident becomes more individual than the last, but Bergson is hoping:

Metaphysics in this sense,
he holds, is the mere solving
of pseudo-problems, as the
metaphysician works out an
elaborate system for reconciling
differences which never existed
in the first place, but were invented
for purposes of convenience. (p. 93).

Burke considers conversion and regression in religion later in the book.

Christ's conversations with the
theologians at the age of twelve,
and the calm assurance to his
parents that he must be about
his Father's business (p. 155)

is a deliberate orientation:

He was concerned with
matters of strategy, of
presentation, apparently
being certain from the
start that his point of view
was "correct." (p. 155).

The kind of individual that has a herd instinct which is so strong that he is a founder of a distinct religion would probably be considered radical in modern American culture. If he set up something that functioned like real money, he would be accused of money laundering. A financial crisis that keeps sweeping itself under something less than sound accounting standards is like a stage in the life of the Saul/Paul transformation:

When a man so vigorous as Saul
had of a sudden ceased to be Saul,
in that dramatic interim between
the loss of his old self and his rebirth
as Paul, we may expect to find his structure
shaken to its very roots. (p. 156).

The Christian doctrine arose
at a time of pronounced cultural
mongrelism, when many distinct
cultural integers had been brought
into vital contact by the political
unification of Rome. (p. 159).

Instead of being vital, intrusion by Americans is likely to mess things up like God and God's own screw leaders all crashing down together as partners in America.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
WE MAY BEGIN by noting the fact that all living organisms interpret many of the signs about them. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
categorical guilt, technological psychosis, planned incongruity, conversion upwards, conversion downwards, occupational psychosis, corrective philosophy, tragic mechanism, moral weightings, social mystery, religious rationalization, analogical extension, symbolic labor, trained incapacity, physiological organisms, scapegoat mechanism, communicative medium, neutral vocabulary, gashouse gang, symbolic realism, scientific rationalization
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Middle Ages, Matthew Arnold, Professor Dewey, Poor Whites
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