SE4329: Philosophy and Literary Theory
School | Philosophy |
Department Code | ENCAP |
Module Code | SE4329 |
External Subject Code | V500 |
Number of Credits | 20 |
Level | L6 |
Language of Delivery | English |
Module Leader | Professor Christopher Norris |
Semester | Spring Semester |
Academic Year | 2015/6 |
Outline Description of Module
To assess the implications of recent literary theory for our thinking about issues of truth, knowledge, meaning, intentionality, and related topics in philosophy of mind and language. The approach will be mainly through a detailed comparative reading of texts – like those of Frege and Saussure – which help to explain why the two traditions have drawn so widely apart despite their many areas of shared concern. We shall also read essays by a number of (arguably) ‘post-analytic’ philosophers – among them Quine, Davidson, Putnam, and Rorty – with a view to understanding what has been made of them by literary and cultural theorists. The module will therefore be ‘interdisciplinary’ in the sense of questioning certain received distinctions, as between philosophy and literary theory, or philosophy in the ‘analytic’ and ‘continental’ modes. However, we shall avoid the kind of all-purpose levelling approach that treats philosophy – in Richard Rorty’s phrase – as just another ‘kind of writing’ whose chief virtue is to throw up all manner of creative redescriptions, inventive re-tellings of its own prehistory, or new-found ‘metaphors we can live by’. Some background knowledge of work in the broadly analytic tradition – especially philosophy of language – will be useful but not prerequisite.
On completion of the module a student should be able to
- demonstrate the ability to discuss topics in literary criticism and theory from a well-informed philosophical standpoint.
- demonstrate a grasp of the way that philosophical texts can be analysed with regard to certain distinctive elements of stylistic, metaphorical, and narrative structure.
- demonstrate their powers of conceptual grasp through exposure to a range of often conflicting arguments, e.g., about literary realism, meaning and authorial intent. They will thus be better placed to question or criticise some of the predominant assumptions in other fields of philosophical study.
How the module will be delivered
This module will be delivered through a weekly two-hour lecture plus a weekly seminar and periods of individual consultation for discussing lecture contents, coursework topics, special (relevant) interests, etc. The seminars will involve discussion sessions led by a member of staff, as well as discussion sessions where students are required to make presentations and/or lead discussion.
The module will be taught using printed books and journal articles available from the library or available online (e.g. via Learning Central). Timetabled sessions will be supplemented with written material in the form of a skeletal outline of the session content provided as a printed handout and on Learning Central. Any supplementary material in a permanent form (e.g. a paper handout or downloadable document) will be made available at the beginning of the session.
Audio recordings will be used as an occasional supplement to the teaching on this module.
Images, diagrams, video and other multi-media resources will not be used in this module.
Skills that will be practised and developed
Students will develop employability skills which include the ability to synthesise information, operating in group-based discussion involving negotiating ideas and producing clear, informed arguments in a professional manner.
How the module will be assessed
The formative assessment for this module will take the form of essays of a length between 1,500 and 2,000 words.
The summative assessment for this module will take the form of a three hour written examination during which candidates will complete two essays on topics of their choice.
This module is assessed according to the Marking Criteria set out in the Philosophy UG Student Handbook. There are academic or competence standards which limit the availability of adjustments or alternative assessments for students with disabilities. Reading, understanding, and conveying complex arguments in written form are the key transferable skills at the core of this module.
Assessment Breakdown
Type | % | Title | Duration(hrs) |
---|---|---|---|
Exam - Spring Semester | 100 | Philosophy And Literary Theory | 3 |
Syllabus content
Week One: Philosophical perspectives on literary theory/‘literary’ perspectives
on philosophy
Week Two: Sense, Reference, and Possible Worlds: is literary fiction a problem?
Week Three: Authorial intention, speech-act theory, and textual meaning
Week Four: Formalism, Structuralism and Post-Structuralism
Week Five: The ‘Linguistic Turn’: analytic and continental perspectives
Week Six: Hermeneutics and Interpretation-Theory
Week Seven: William Empson: ambiguity and complex words
Week Eight: Deconstruction: some philosophical/literary bearings
Week Nine: Jacques Derrida: supplementarity and deviant logics
Week Ten: Neo-Pragmatism and the Case ‘Against Theory’: Richard Rorty and Stanley Fish
Essential Reading and Resource List
Terry Eagleton, Literary Theory: an introduction (Oxford: Blackwell)
Jonathan Culler, Literary Theory: a very short introduction (Oxford Universty Press)
Philip Rice and Patricia Waugh (eds.), Modern Literary Theory: a reader (London: Edward Arnold)
Christopher Norris, Deconstruction: theory and practice, 3rd ed. (London: Routledge)
Christopher Norris, The Deconstructive Turn: essays in the rhetoric of philosophy (London: Methuen)
Christopher Norris, The Contest of Faculties: philosophy and theory after deconstruction (London: Routledge)
Christopher Norris, Fiction, Philosophy and Literary Theory: will the real Saul Kripke please stand up? (London: Continuum)
Samuel C. Wheeler, Deconstruction as Analytic Philosophy (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press)
Background Reading and Resource List
Terry Eagleton, Literary Theory: an introduction (Oxford: Blackwell)
Jonathan Culler, Literary Theory: a very short introduction (Oxford Universty Press)
Philip Rice and Patricia Waugh (eds.), Modern Literary Theory: a reader (London: Edward Arnold)
Christopher Norris, Deconstruction: theory and practice, 3rd ed. (London: Routledge)
Christopher Norris, The Deconstructive Turn: essays in the rhetoric of philosophy (London: Methuen)
Christopher Norris, The Contest of Faculties: philosophy and theory after deconstruction (London: Routledge)
Christopher Norris, Fiction, Philosophy and Literary Theory: will the real Saul Kripke please stand up? (London: Continuum)
Samuel C. Wheeler, Deconstruction as Analytic Philosophy (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press)