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Hunter's "The History of Theory"

Ian Hunter's article, "The History of Theory" (Critical Inquiry 33, 78-112 [pdf]), has come up in recent discussions as an alternative to the rather stagnant "'Theory' Wars" that seem to creep up every so often.

Some non-exhaustive comments/notes:

(1) His essay begins, "One of the most striking features of recent discussions of the moment of theory in the humanities is the lack of even proximate agreement what the object of such theory might be and about the language in which it has been or should be conducted" (78). He continues, "it is fruitless to begin a history of theory by trying to identify its common object or shared language" (80). All the same, Hunter proceeds throughout his essay to deflate a wide body of literature under the single, monolithic heading of 'theory' in order to tie his larger argument together. (Larger argument discussed below.) The deflation occurs through the construction of a rather strange chain of equivalences: "the contents of theory ... together with its cognates structuralism and post-structuralism" (80), "in the emergence of what would become known as deconstructive philosophy and, more generally, theory" (81), "the inseparability of structuralism and post-structuralism" (82), "a certain kind of philosopher or theorist" (85) and "the apprentice phenomenologist or theorist" (86). This chain combines and recombines throughout: 'philosopher and theorist' and 'phenomenologist or theorist,' on the oen hand, and 'deconstructive philosophy, that is, theory' and "structuralism and post-structuralism, that is, theory,' on the other. Thus, the philosopher, the theorist and the phenomenologist are all equivalent. Similarly, deconstructive philosophy, structuralism and post-structuralism are all the same, that is, 'theory.' On the one hand, a chain of "figures of thought" (95) and their "postures" (83). Hunter's avowal to avoid identifying the "object" and "language" of "theory" results in him calling nearly everything "theory." It seems, on this level, his project is a non-starter. If "theory" does not have a history (he constructs this counter-argument in parallel with Derrida's remarks on philosophy; but, then, why not begin with Althusser; viz, "ideology has no history"?) it isn't for the reasons he is arguing against or for the reasons his "opponents" suggest: it is because "theory" is an object that has resisted definition. (c.f., Nietzsche, of course, "only that which has no history can be defined.")

(2) The question of Hunter's sincerity must be raised. That is, to what extent is Hunter, qua historian of theory, willing to take the claims and arguments of those he is studying seriously. I can't help but wonder, especially insofar as he quickly drops his original term, "attitude," for another, "posture." For instance, "theory's posture of critique adopted in relation to so-called empiricist and positivist sciences" (83), "the posture of intellectual contempt for the sciences of facts" (87) and theory as a set of "veiled instructions" (96).

(3) The explicit and implicit uses of Foucault leave me a bit worried. The main thrust of his argument is that theory is an "attitude" (81), a "posture" (83; see point above for more references), a "figure of thought" and a "conception of history" (95), the "work of the self on the self" (96), "a particularly intense hermeneutics of the self" (98, 105), and a "persona" (104). The only reference throughout the paper on these concepts is to Foucault's lecture, "On The Beginning of the Hermeneutics of the Self," which discusses Greek and early Christian ethical practices. The problem here is that Hunter unproblematically lifts these concepts - without citation, attribution, or discussion - from a discussion of ancient ethics and "applies" them to the present. While it is certainly possible to construct an analytic of ethical practices, Hunter does no such thing, points to no such discussion elsewhere, and removes a particular argument from its context transforming it into a trans-historical "theory." While he implicitly structures his argument around Foucault's last works on ethics, he explicitly attacks Foucault's earlier archeaological works, without a discussion of the possibility of transformations in Foucault's own thought through his career. (For instance, why archaeology was displaced by genealogy which was displaced by ethics.) In addition to failing to elaborate upon his (re-)working of ethos, Hunter also fails to convincingly explain why this is the best way to proceed with a history of theory. Even if he is right that a focus upon language or object is prone to failure, this does not guarantee that his own approach is correct.

(4) The discussion of "literary theory" is preposterous, especially coming from a quasi-Foucauldian like himself. "When, in the 1970s, literary theory opened its campaign for control of Anglo-American English departments - for example, in works by Jonathan Culler, Eagleton, and Jameson - it did so through a particular delegitimizataion and reconstruction of the existing discipline, in this case various versions of the so-called New Criticism" (104). The first problem is the distinction between "literary theory" and "New Criticism" (as though New Criticism isn't already "literary theory") and the relation between "literary theory" (a term which only begins to appear at this point in his argument) and "theory" as such. But these problems are not particularly interesting. What is more interesting is the claim of a "campaign," which is signalled by three cited texts; Culler's Structuralist Poetics (1975), Eagleton's Criticism and Ideology (1978) and Jameson's Marxism and Form (1971). For a campaign, the opening salvo is quite dispersed over time (a period of seven years stretching from the early to the late seventies), leaving one to wonder how co-ordinated it was in the first place; i.e., the extent to which it was a "campaign" which already suggests the previous existence of an intentional, defined programme with specific objectives. In other words, it presupposes the existence of not only a "strategy," but also a "strategist." There's little indication that such a strategy or strategist existed. And, if there was, Hunter makes no reference to it - except, of course, three books published a number of years apart, two of which were "Marxist" and one of which was "structuralist." Worse for his argument is that he suggests that campaign was buttressed by the "prestigious persona of the theorist" (104). But how could the "persona of the theorist" be "prestigious" if it had not yet laid claim to dominance within the discipline? If a campaign was launched, it was to gain control of the discipline and, thus, enact a redistribution of awards and statuses. The objective of the campaign - i.e., statuses - cannot be a weapon on the part of the challenger; a challenger attacking the already existing status of the ("so-called") New Criticism. Further, is there possibly any conflict between the explanation of theory as ethic and theory as campaign for control?

(5) Finally, the discussion of social theory - something I had looked forward to being a "social theorist" myself - was not only disappointing, but wrong. The reason that Hunter is wrong is that he ignores the larger context of sociology - the discipline in which social theory is practiced - in the sixties and seventies. His argument is as though Habermas just appears. First, he claims that Habermas presents the introduction of phenomenology into sociology. This is not the case at all. Sociological theory (i.e., Parsonian structural-functionalism) was already under attack from within sociology by Parsons' own students, specifically the ethnomethodology of Garfinkle based upon Schutz's social phenomenology. For Garfinkle, the attempt to was to re-direct sociology from the "macro" to the "micro" - a programme rapidly followed up, in different ways, by people such as Goffman and Geertz. Indeed, the phenomenological movement within sociology was already so pronounced prior to Habermas' intervention that Habermas was able to attempt a synthesis of Parsonian macro-sociology and Garfinkle-ian micro-sociology. The issue, then, is one that Hunter signals earlier in his essay ("Our argument, though, is that this reworking took place not through the virtual relations of the episteme but as a series of concrete intellectual struggles" (103), but which also disappears at its most manifest moment; viz., the attempt for any discourse seeking to pass through the threshold of scientificity to transcend its essential lack of foundations (something Hunter notes earlier, "do battle for the privilege of foundational status" (79)). While he is correct to see Habermas as an intervention into the issue of foundations and to see Habermas as proposing a "social theory" solution to the problem. (Although not explicitly thematized as such.) He nonetheless misses the relevant dispute between sociological theory (or, in Parsonian language, "a general theory of society") and social theory (that is, the introduction of interpretative, symbolic and cultural concerns into sociology that had been displaced by macro-structural concerns of integration).

By Craig | November 5, 2006 in Fashionable Nonesense | Permalink

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The question of Hunter's sincerity must be raised. That is, to what extent is Hunter, qua historian of theory, willing to take the claims and arguments of those he is studying seriously.

I hate to say this so bluntly, but have you looked at his other work or considered the fact that the article's in Critical Inquiry? Have you looked at the editorial board or the other people published in that issue? If any publication demands of its authors a familiarity with the history of theory, it's CI.

Posted by: Scott Eric Kaufman | Nov 5, 2006 10:31:23 PM

Craig, may I begin by constructively suggesting that you take a different tone - one more likely to conduce to conversation.

You begin by asserting that the 'Theory' debates that 'creep up every now and then' are 'stagnant'. This is rather presumptively negative framing of the debate (since other people think it is not stagnant, but interesting.) You go on to write, "The question of Hunter's sincerity must be raised. That is, to what extent is Hunter, qua historian of theory, willing to take the claims and arguments of those he is studying seriously. I can't help but wonder, especially insofar as he quickly drops his original term, 'attitude,' for another, 'posture.'"

The situation seems to me to be this: you are setting an extremely high bar for anyone who would take a critical attitude toward Theory'. Anyone who shifts from 'attitude' to 'posture' (which are actually likely to appear as thesaurus cognates) is betraying signs of not taking his subject seriously, and is himself deserving of being tarred with the brush of potential insincerity - a significant personal accusation to make, may I say. Why shouldn't someone shift from talking about 'attitude' to 'posture'.

Think about Foucault's talk about a certain 'attitude' in "What Is Enlightenment?" Does he define the term? No. He shifts around between several semi-synonyms - 'attitude' and 'ethos, for example. He never explains what the difference is, if any, between an attitude and an ethos. He just waves his hand in a rather grand way. At that point in his exposition, the reader is effectively called upon to exhibit considerable interpretive charity in figuring out what the hell he could mean by 'attitude'. Or maybe you think it would be fair to say that we should sharply question Foucault's 'sincerity', just because he juggled 'attitude' and 'ethos'?

It seems to me you are employing an unhelpful double-standard. A combination of a personal tendency to be highly and personally insulting and dismissive of intellectual projects you suspect you will disagree with - combined with a hypersensitivity to any perceived sleight to those you think you might favor, plus insistence on making a big deal of such perceived sleights - is bound to lead to trouble. You can't BOTH be rude to others AND hypersensitive to any perceived rudeness. EITHER you should become more tolerant of being on the receiving end of sharp elbows OR you should soften you own.

Just my Miss Manners two cents worth. I would sincerely like to discuss the Hunter piece and shall do so more substantively a bit later.

Posted by: jholbo | Nov 5, 2006 10:51:07 PM

I think Craig has rather carefully established fair cause for concern, here, particularly with his more substantive questions with regard to Foucault. That "posture" is generally far more disdainful a word than "attitude" is perhaps only vaguely indicative of these problems, no? Taken together with Craig's actual criticisms, it does indeed seem to betray a larger difficulty with Hunter's approach.

Posted by: Charles | Nov 5, 2006 11:37:52 PM

May we have a link to the Hunter essay, svp?

Posted by: | Nov 5, 2006 11:42:04 PM

Charles, I think you missed the point of my first post, as well as its ample echo in John's. I hate to appeal to authority, here, but the article Craig's savaged as theoretically illiterate and generally worthless has been thoroughly vetted. Again, I say, look at CI's editorial board and the other writers who appear in the current CI. What this post betrays is an absolute unwillingness to take seriously any criticisms which are, well, critical. It's a knee-jerk with intellectual dressing.

P.S. Charles, if you've "read" the article the same way you've "read" all the essays about Derrida in TE, feel free to drop me a line and I'll email you a .pdf of it.

Posted by: Scott Eric Kaufman | Nov 5, 2006 11:45:54 PM

Mysterious anonymous person can send me an email for a .pdf too, despite, you know, all the whatever.

Posted by: Scott Eric Kaufman | Nov 5, 2006 11:46:51 PM

A few short replies before bed:

SEK could do well to re-read my post. At no point do I accuse him of "illiteracy" with respect to "theory," but, rather, I question his sincerity. To be insincere requires a degree of familiarity - something Hunter clearly has. I don't question his knowledge, I question the construction of his argument; viz., that is, his elision from "attitude" to "posture." JH might consider re-reading Hunter's pieece (I give the references): "posture" is never used in a kind way. He uses it dismissively. For instance, a "posture" of a "critique" of the "science of facts." That's to say there is no "critique of the science of facts," but, rather, the mere "posture" of one.

Related to this point, Hunter doesn't cite "What is Enlightenment?" for what it is worth. He cites a lecture on Greek and early Christian ethics. And he doesn't cite particular passages or arguments, but the whole thing. (Your point, by the way, is in my favour: I've already criticized Hunter for shoddy use of Foucault. You merely point out another instance of such; namely, Hunter's failure to discuss the problematic formulation of "ethos" in Foucault's work - which Hunter, as I said, cites unproblematically.)

By the way, were I one who found Habermas' work compelling, I'd make similar comments with regard to the way he was treated. See, for instance, footnotes 62, 63, 64, and 65. (And, indeed, the entire discussion under the heading "social theory.") The last footnote is an exception insofar as he actually cites a passage (a twenty-five page passage at that), but he ends his footnote with "and more generally" one should see Between Facts and Norms - a mammoth and complex book. (Something akin, if you will, to citing Hegel's Phenomenology for a discussion of "Spirit" or Marx's Capital for a discussion of "capitalism.")

Regarding "stagnant," one might consider some of the comments made by JH in the last thread; especially the suggestion that the debate begin anew. Only something dead, dying or stagnant can be begun a new. Otherwise, it has a whole lot of steam and doesn't need a reboot. This is another way of saying that while the question is interesting, its presentation and reception has been less than underwhelming.

SEK, you might give pause for a moment and consider the possibility that I do, in fact, know what I'm talking about. You know, consider the possibility that I'm a "trained" and "certified" social theorist and not an amateur. You know - the sort of person who mght write a dissertation on and in social theory, who might teach the subject, and who might apply for jobs advertised for that specialty.

I've added a link to the essay in the post above.

Posted by: Craig | Nov 6, 2006 12:16:12 AM

Scott, John... My jaw drops.

You ask for a substantive argument about a particular essay. Craig gives you a pretty detailed preliminary reading of that essay. Scott responds by talking about the journal in which it is published, stating that therefore it's been "thoroughly vetted." And John dismisses one small part of the reading by asserting that there's no difference between two (um) different words before going on a complete tangent about Craig's supposed personal tendencies as evidenced elsewhere.

Exrtraordinary.

Posted by: Jon | Nov 6, 2006 1:54:47 AM

Rudeness and hypersentitiveness, the American symptom and disease.

Posted by: Amish Lovelock | Nov 6, 2006 2:21:20 AM

Jon, I think you misunderstood my argument by analogy. I'm trying to convince Craig that he is taking an inappropriate tone, and that this tone will have inappropriate intellectual consequences. (I'm trying to be constructive here.)

Craig, fair enough about the 'stagnation', if you were only referring to the recent threads. It's true that Hunter doesn't cite "What is Enlightenment?" (although the term 'attitude' suggests to me it may be in the background.) But my argument didn't assume the contrary. I'm trying to show you how your criticisms of the essay are, necessarily, stringent in a premature way. The proof is this: if someone treated Foucault the way you treat Hunter - that is, if they rather darkly hinted not just that he was unserious in his treatment of Enlightenment but actually dishonest - simply because he uses the term 'attitude', then trades it for semi-synonyms, you would be extremely indignant. You would regard this as a sloppy, careless dismissal of Foucault. Yet you have yourself treated Hunter this way; that is, you are preparing to hold him to a standard that - if it were applied to a thinker you admire, like Foucault - you would regard as imposed simply to have an excuse not to treat him seriously. When Foucault talks about the 'attitude of modernity', or when Hunter talks about the 'attitude of Theory', a certain latitude and interpretive charity is in order. These are not matters that can be treated with perfect precision. Foucault says 'it's like an ethos'. Hunter says 'it's like a posture'. I think both need to be allowed a certain space in which to develop their ideas. There isn't any sense accusing them of dishonesty YET. Since I assume you do not want to be - or be thought to be - a sloppy careless thinker, I am inviting you to back down, in light of the fact that there isn't any point assessing Hunter's paper with respect to an unrealizably high standard about what such a paper could achieve. The rest of your post needs addressing, too, but I do think it's important not to start with the bar set too high.

I trust you will be able to rehinge your jaw in light of this explanation, Jon? (I hope so.)

Posted by: jholbo | Nov 6, 2006 3:17:37 AM

My jaw is more or less as it was, but for what it's worth here's my take...

It seems entirely worthwhile for Craig to point out the way in which Hunter slips between "attitude" and "posture," and the work that that slip accomplishes, or perhaps rather the work for which that slip substitutes. This seems the very model of a close reading.

Likewise, it would seem to me entirely worthwhile to make a similar observation about a slip in Foucault between "attitude" and "ethos," and the work that that slip accomplishes.

All the more so, in both cases, if the slip is not itself acknowledged or defended, or if the slip carries a significant burden of either author's rhetorical appeal.

Of course, the slip between "attitude" and "posture" is different from that between "attitude" and "ethos." They are doing different kinds of work. (See below.) And they may also take on different weight or significance in the two texts.

One might therefore take different conclusions in each case. But the method itself is fine.

The issue for Craig's reading is not the methology. The fact that there is such a slip in Hunter's essay can and perhaps should be commented upon. Indeed, I'd agree prima facie that it's a significant slip.

Where I disagree is not with the methodology, but with the conclusion that Craig reaches--admittedly very tentatively ("I can't help but wonder") in what is by some distance the shortest of his five points. Personally, I think it's a leap to go from that observation to the claim (OK, not even a claim; to the question) about Hunter's sincerity.

After all, questioning Hunter's sincerity is tantamount to claiming that he is lying. Which is a claim about Hunter's intention that is (for me) a step too far. A claim that I don't think is warranted by the evidence provided.

Indeed, I fear that Craig's claim is uncomfortably close to Hunter's own insinuation: for by suggesting that theory is a "posture," he's also implying that it is "just" show; bluster; insincere. Whereas "attitude" (as John's reading of Foucault helps us see) can equally shade into "ethos," a much more serious and committed engagement of (the care of) the self.

So long as Hunter remains with "attitude," he maintains an ambivalence or tension as to whether what's at stake in theory is mere "posturing" or a substantial "ethos." And perhaps that tension is at the heart of so much of the debate about theory.

For have we perhaps not put a finger on a signficant dividing line: between those who see theory as an attitude, an ethos of committed critical enquiry, a form or ornirariness if you like that won't put up with the commonplaces of tradition or appearance; and on the other hand those who see theory as an attitude, a posture that pretends to be something that it's not, that pretends to be profound where in fact it is at best a recycling of what could be put more commonsensically, that is lilttle more than cynical appearance.

Posted by: Jon | Nov 6, 2006 3:54:37 AM

Oh, and there's probably more to say about the slippage between "attitude" and "deportment" (on the one hand) and "rudeness" (on the other). This would appear to be another crux: not just as to whether having an attitude implies either having a manner or being mannered; but now, more radically, as to whether it means having good manners (deportment as in deporting oneself well) or having bad manners ("having an attitude").

John, taking on the role of "Miss Manners" suggests that Craig's "attitude" prevents polite or productive discussion; stops it in its tracks. Craig, by contrast, seems to suggest that his attitude is precisely the critical stance (to use yet another near-synonym) required to kickstart discussion.

All I'd suggest is that sweeping such distinctions under the carpet, either by saying they are immaterial or in the name of "interpretative charity," is to miss much of what's at stake in these discussions (stagnant or otherwise), why they become bad-tempered (ill-mannered), and so is also to obscure any possible way out of the stagnation.

Posted by: Jon | Nov 6, 2006 4:12:00 AM

I still say it would be better to rehinge your jaw, Jon. (But, at the end of the day, it's your jaw. Do as you will.)

I don't see why 'posture' is derogatory. 'Attitude' can mean the way you hold your body. That's what 'posture' means. ('Ethos' is, comparatively, a less close synonym, though we can let that one go.) It's true that 'posturing' is negative, but 'attitude' can be negative, too. ('Don't give me attitude, give me argument.') No one thinks Foucault is dissing Modernity by calling it 'attitude'. And notions that Theory is, in some sense, 'performative' are not generally regarded as derogatory. They are some of the most standard means of defending the alleged great good of Theory. Namely, Theorists recognize the 'performative' character of philosophy - or the central role of 'play', or something of the sort. If Hunter is saying that Theorists are adopting 'postures', is that clearly more negative than saying they are 'performing' or 'playing'? (I encourage less leaping to negative connotations.) Here's a passage in the version that I have (I got it from Hunter himself and assume it's the same as in CI, which I haven't gone to download yet.)

"if the various developments referred to in the “moment of theory” are unified neither by a common object nor by a single theoretical language they can, however, still be viewed as participating in a shared intellectual attitude or deportment, albeit to different degrees. This is an attitude that is sceptical towards empirical experience (in a more or less Kantian way), but also towards a priori formalisms — which it regards as foreclosing a higher-level (“transcendental”) experience — and hence cultivates openness to breakthrough phenomena of various kinds. It will be argued that this attitude is characteristic of a particular kind of intellectual persona sustained by a certain inner discipline, and that providing an account of this persona and discipline is central to, without being exhaustive of historical reflection on the “moment of theory”."

Whence 'attitude'? Well, if not Foucault, then Derrida, whom Hunter quotes:

"“The transition to the phenomenological attitude is made necessary, thus, by the impotence or philosophical fragility of genetism when the latter, by means of a positivism which does not understand itself, believes itself capable of enclosure by a ‘science-of-facts’ (Tatsachenwissenschaft), whether this be a natural science or science of the mind”'

Hunter wants to say that the 'attitude' of Theory is a distinctive updating of the phenomenological 'attitude', and that Derrida both investigates and exhibits it.

Compare Hunter's thumbnail formulation with one by, say, Simon Critchley from the "Blackwell Companion to Continental Philosophy" - this is continental philosophy now, not Theory:

"Philosophy as an accusing reflection upon history, culture, and society can lead to the awakening of critical consciousness, what Husserl would call the reactivation of a sedimented tradition. To push this a little further, the responsibility of the philosopher - in Husserl's formula "the civil servant of humanity" - is the production of crisis, disturbing the slow accumulation of the deadening sediment of tradition in the name of a reactivating historical critique, whose horizon would be an emancipated life-world. Philosophy in the Continental tradition has an emancipatory intent, and rightly so. For a philosopher, I take it, the real crisis would be a situation where crisis was not recognized - "Crisis, what crisis?" In such a world, philosophy would have no purpose, other than as a historical curiosity, an intellectual distraction, or a technical means of sharpening one's common sense.

The fact that philosophy in the Continental tradition can be said to respond to a sense of crisis in modernity and indeed tries to produce crisis insofar as it endeavours to awaken a critical consciousness of the present, perhaps also goes some way to explaining its most salient and dramatic difference from analytic philosophy, namely its anti-scientism (an attitude that is, of course, far from being anti-scientific). The critique of scientism here resides in the dual belief that (i) the procedures of the natural sciences cannot and, moreoever, should not provide a model for philosophical method, and (ii) that the natural sciences do not provide our primary or most significant access to the world."

End Critchley passage. Critchley goes on to say that he finds it necessary to organize an anthology of of continental phiosophy around figures - rather than ideas or problems, say. Continental philosophy is, to a significant degree, philosophical persona-based, according to Critchley. This is not a derogatory notion, merely a result of looking at the material and deciding that any other way of organizing the material would make less helpful sense of it. Why should this be so? (HINT: Critchley is hardly a toxic enemy of continental philosophy, plotting its polemical destruction.)

So what's the relationship between continental philosophy and 'Theory'? Interesting question. More later.

Posted by: jholbo | Nov 6, 2006 4:42:54 AM

I don't see why 'posture' is derogatory. 'Attitude' can mean the way you hold your body. That's what 'posture' means. ('Ethos' is, comparatively, a less close synonym, though we can let that one go.) It's true that 'posturing' is negative, but 'attitude' can be negative, too. ('Don't give me attitude, give me argument.') No one thinks Foucault is dissing Modernity by calling it 'attitude'

Um, I don't often do this but... Let me suggest you go back and read my comments again.

Posted by: Jon | Nov 6, 2006 5:00:45 AM

Sorry Jon, I meant that bit to be addressed to Charles. I didn't make that clear.

Posted by: jholbo | Nov 6, 2006 5:12:10 AM

But to answer your question...

If Hunter is saying that Theorists are adopting 'postures', is that clearly more negative than saying they are 'performing' or 'playing'?

The short answer to this is "yes."

A longer answer would point out that a similar tension afflicts the word "performance" and (in a slightly different way) "play" as afflicts "attitude."

A still longer answer would return to the point that it's not so important (to me) whether or not Hunter is negative about Theory. The point is more that in this semantic web anchored by the word "attitude" we might see something of the crux that divides those who declare themselves for and those who declare themselves against theory. For some it is (just) an attitude, an indefensible and superficial (im)posture (to recall the title of Sokal's book); for others, it is an attitude, a trenchant stance to be defended.

Which is why it seems worth looking closely at the ways in which a word such as "attitude" as well as its (near) cognates (posture, ethos, manner, play, performance, and so on) circulates and functions within a given text. Rather, again, than skating over the differences, over the polysemy on which so much of this dispute (I'd argue) uneasily rests.

Posted by: Jon | Nov 6, 2006 5:15:41 AM

OK, and then enough from me at least for the time being. But surely there's the hint of an irregular verb here...

I have a stance.
You (sing) have an attitude.
He/she/it is posturing.

We have manners.
You (plural) are mannered.
They have bad manners.

Posted by: Jon | Nov 6, 2006 5:39:23 AM

Jon, do you think that 'good posture' has an air of paradox to it? (Hint: I think the short answer is 'no'.)

Posted by: jholbo | Nov 6, 2006 7:50:01 AM

Could someone tell me what is at stake in this (as far as I can tell, not very interesting) debate over 'Theory'?

Hunter tells us it's departmental. Yawn. Though, his own intervention is, apparently, not sectarian patch-defense ... Is there something more at stake than this?

Posted by: s0metim3s | Nov 6, 2006 8:02:25 AM

I wonder what others make of the opening quotation from Bruno Latour. It is dismissive of Derridean critique. It makes fun of the study of 'critique,' describing it as a 'potent euphoric drug' that allows the critic to be 'always right.' The end of the quotation from Latour ends: "Isn't this fabulous? Isn't it really worth going to gradute school to study critique?" Kind of a silly from Latour, as he uses against critique (his word, apparently, for theory) the very means he ridicules critique for employing. In fact, there is something serious to be said about the division of labor in society and what happens when a small elite spends a lot of time studying and thinking while most everyone else "dives right in." But instead of saying something about it, Latour makes fun of it.

Posted by: Swifty | Nov 6, 2006 9:10:33 AM

Craig: "The question of Hunter's sincerity must be raised. That is, to what extent is Hunter, qua historian of theory, willing to take the claims and arguments of those he is studying seriously. I can't help but wonder, especially insofar as he quickly drops his original term, "attitude," for another, "posture.""

Craig: "SEK, you might give pause for a moment and consider the possibility that I do, in fact, know what I'm talking about. You know, consider the possibility that I'm a "trained" and "certified" social theorist and not an amateur. You know - the sort of person who might write a dissertation on and in social theory, who might teach the subject, and who might apply for jobs advertised for that specialty."

The sort of person who might work in academia does not jump to immediate questioning of the *sincerity* of someone whose work he or she is studying. Especially based on nothing more than a shift in word choice. Someone may be wrong, either because they haven't examined their object of study well enough or because they've reasoned to conclusions that aren't supported. But to focus on intention?

I guess I can sort of imagine Craig at work in his specialty. "No, I must disagree with my colleague. His thesis can't be supported because he's insincere in his studies; although it looks like he's devoted years to this work, it was all motivated by prejudice, and can be ignored."

No, I guess that I can't really imagine Craig at work.

Posted by: Rich Puchalsky | Nov 6, 2006 9:55:24 AM

John, your rebuttal has the appearance of grasping at straws. The issue isn't whether a deathbed essay by Foucault is problematic - I fully agree with you that it is and, further, of the three identifiable periods in Foucault's work, the last period is, to me, the least compelling - the issue is whether or not Hunter elides his terms and, worse, whether that ellision moves from a roughly "neutral" analytical term (i.e., "ethic" or "attitude" or "ethos" - the latter I don't recall him using, but all the same) to a value-ladden and evaluative term (i.e., "posture"). Given the controversy that has arisen as a consequence of the use of the word here, the onus is on Hunter (or his advocates) to explain why "theory's posture of critique adopted in relation to so-called empiricist and positivist sciences" (83; my emphasis) is not an expression of disdain. On my reading there is a significant different between "theory's critique in relation to" and "theory's posture of critique adopted in relation to." Namely, one is a critique; the other is the "posture" of a critique.

But, if you can't get beyond the questioning of "posture," how about other issues I raised? That is, the incorrect history of "social theory" he presents. (Other aspects of its faults have occurred to me since - his prime example, Theory of Communicative Action, was published in English until 1984; "social theory" was already established at that point.) How about the equivalences between "philosopher," "phenomenologist" and "theorist"? How about his version of the "campaign" to win control of English departments?

Ange: I think it is clear that there is nothing at stake beyond what graduate students will read, who will be hired, and how undergraduates will be taught. Someone can correct me if I'm wrong. At best, the stakes are just another front in the "culture wars" - but that is pushing it.

Posted by: Craig | Nov 6, 2006 11:53:53 AM

Jon, I think the venue of publication is significant here. To claim that an article sandwiched (in this issue) between ones by Jameson and Zizek betrays an insincere engagement with the arguments of people like Jameson and Zizek makes me wonder how sincere Craig is in his engagement with Hunter. (See? We can all play that game.) The fact of the matter is, Craig just seems to be a poor reader, even of his own words. For example, he tells me:

At no point do I accuse him of "illiteracy" with respect to "theory"

And yet:

it is because "theory" is an object that has resisted definition. (c.f., Nietzsche, of course, "only that which has no history can be defined.")
the discussion of social theory - something I had looked forward to being a "social theorist" myself - was not only disappointing, but wrong.

And pretty much everything in between. What Craig has done here—unconvincingly, I may add—is nitpick through Hunter's argument, found various points of contention all the while failing to address its central argument. He accuses Hunter of insincerity while being insincere himself. How charitable a reading did Craig perform?

Posted by: Scott Eric Kaufman | Nov 6, 2006 12:21:15 PM

More evidence of Craig's charitable reading:

Given the controversy that has arisen as a consequence of the use of the word here, the onus is on Hunter (or his advocates) to explain why "theory's posture of critique adopted in relation to so-called empiricist and positivist sciences" (83; my emphasis) is not an expression of disdain.

Because the single most charitable thing one can demand of an article is that it define its terms in light of a comments thread on a website the author doesn't read.

Posted by: Scott Eric Kaufman | Nov 6, 2006 12:26:09 PM

Scott, you haven't demonstrated that I claimed he was "theoretically illiterate." You did, however, demonstrate that I questioned his choice of sources and references - a standard intellectual practice, I might add - especially given that his discussion of whether or not "theory" can have a "history" is grounded in a reading of a lecture by Derrida. Surely a question in relation to Husserl, Heidegger or Nietzsche is not "uncharitable" when one is dealing with Derrida!

I'd be grateful if you'd point out where my reading of the tension between "sociological" and "social" theory is incorrect. Few people have a serious interest in Parsons' "general theory of society" anymore. I'd be greatly interested in discussing it and the politics of the responses to it as it points - returning to Derrida yet again - to the desire of the social sciences to find solid ground.

Finally, it was Hunter who chose "posture." He first used "attitude" (with vague allusions to Foucault's work on Greek and early Christian ethics as ballast) claiming that "theory was an attitude." That quickly expanding into a long list of different things: a hermeneutic of the self, work by the self on the self, ethics, and, yes, a posture. If Hunter saw fit to defend "attitude" - presumably the concept actualizing his critique and history - he might want to also defend other related (but certainly different?) concepts. It is a fair question to Hunter (or his supporters) to ask about the meaning "posture" and his intent in using the word in forms such as "the posture of critique." If there is a problem of charity, Scott, it is that you aren't willing to question your superiors (Holbo, Hunter, or whatever). That is, you aren't being "charitable" to Hunter, but, rather, "blindly obedient."

Posted by: Craig | Nov 6, 2006 12:41:14 PM

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