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RIP J. Hillis Miller (1929-2021)

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

Check out the obituary of J. Hillis Miller, a towering figure in the “Yale School,” along with Geoffrey Hartman, Paul de Man, and Jacques Derrida (whose work we’ll read soon). Miller and his confreres revolutionized the way we read in ways we’ll explore in some detail through the work of Derrida and Barbara Johnson (one of the first generation of critics trained at Yale by Miller et al.).

Bonus points for anyone who can find the Nietzsche reference in the obit…

J. Hillis Miller, 92, Dies; Helped Revolutionize Literary Studies

He was most closely associated with the Yale School, which took on the foundations of literary scholarship in the 1970s and ’80s. J. Hillis Miller, a literary critic who, by applying the wickedly difficult analytic method known as deconstruction to a broad range of British and American prose and poetry, helped revolutionize the study of literature, died on Feb.

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blog review

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

I’ve just finished commenting on all the posts I’ve received and wanted to share a few thoughts and props:

  • I’m impressed with the quality of your reading and writing over all: Nietzsche’s work is challenging, and many of your are reading/writing/thinking with great sophistication already, often pioneering into areas we left unexplored in our Zooms.
  • Most of you grasped and nicely explained Nietzsche’s central polemic here, which is of course that “truth” as expressed in language and concepts is a network of “lies.” Thus, he’s not criticizing “liars” and urging them to tell the truth. If anything, it’s implicit that “liars” at least know they’re lying, whereas “truth-tellers” deceive themselves about the lying their language does.
  • Relatively few of you ventured out into Nietzsche’s arguments about the implications of this first argument. What do we do if all our thinking and speaking yields “lies”? To review, and to make a long story very short, he explores the pathos and potential of the idea that humans are “architects” with language, and as such “superior to the bee” in that we create “hives” out of nothing. But when we forget that our constructions are just that–constructions–we imprison ourselves and live deadened lives. Instead, he wants us to boldly build and rebuild our reality, becoming people of “intuition” rather than solely pursuing the path of “reason” as modernity dictates we do.
  • If you gave me something, you should have gotten something: a feedback sheet via Dropbox/email that I’ll continue using for you all term. Please reach out if you have questions.

All of you achieved some measure of success here, but a few students’ responses were especially keen, so I recommend that you check them out:

  • Lizzie sums up the argument and closes with a convincing defense of how creative writers embody Nietzsche’s elevation of the person of “intuition” at the end of his essay.
  • Evelyn compiles some well-chosen evidence and then closes with a provocative riff on what Nietzsche would think about extra-linguistic modes of expression, like music and dance. Great example of establishing the argument, then pushing beyond it to explore implications.
  • Jason gives a thorough explanation of the argument that glosses the “reason” v “intuition” contrast nicely.
  • Ayesha’s post is probably the most detailed walk-through of the argument, and she ends with a nice riff on style.

I’m not proposing these examples as cookie cutters for anyone, but I do think they make for valuable reading that we can learn from both in terms of sharper readings of the essay and of rhetorical examples to draw from. Thanks, you four!

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Nietzschean musings

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

After our lively discussion of Nietzsche yesterday, I found myself thinking about Michel Foucault’s quotation of the great Argentinian critic and fiction writer Jorge Luis Borges. I know that was the most English professor sentence ever, but bear with me…

We’ll meet Foucault later in the term. For now, it’s enough to point out that Foucault borrows from Nietzsche a desire to expose the contingent nature of the “discourses” that structure knowledge, to reveal systems that purport to deliver “truth” as constructed “columbariums” or “prison-houses.” Here, in the preface to his book Order of Things, Foucault describes the eureka moment he experienced when reading Borges’s essay on the nature of language. To illustrate the principle (which Nietzsche explores as well, of course) that the same persons, places, or things might be conceptualized or schematized in many different, equally “true” ways, Borges invents a fictitious “Chinese Encyclopedia” that claims to organize all of animal life into an orderly schema. Whereas Western science uses Kingdom/Phylum/Class/Order… (I’m sure I’m messing this up), this Encyclopedia orders things very differently:

  1. those that belong to the Emperor,
  2. embalmed ones,
  3. those that are trained,
  4. suckling pigs,
  5. mermaids,
  6. fabulous ones,
  7. stray dogs,
  8. those included in the present classification,
  9. those that tremble as if they were mad,
  10. innumerable ones,
  11. those drawn with a very fine camelhair brush,
  12. others,
  13. those that have just broken a flower vase,
  14. those that from a long way off look like flies.

Foucault confesses that the passage inspired

laughter that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my thought—our thought that bears the stamp of our age and our geography—breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing things, and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with collapse our age-old distinction between the Same and the Other. […] In the wonderment of this taxonomy, the thing we apprehend in one great leap, the thing that, by means of the fable, is demonstrated as the exotic charm of another system of thought, is the limitation of our own, the stark impossibility of thinking that.”

Michel Foucault, The Order of Things (New York: Pantheon, 1970) xv.

Some of you observed a certain “pessimism” or “nihilism” or “elitism” in Nietzsche’s essay. And I get that. But here we feel the pleasure, which Nietzsche shares, of escaping our sensorial and conceptual “prisons,” of seeing, hearing, and feeling things in a new way, of recognizing that our world is more complex and unknowable than we thought.

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Monica’s post on Nietzsche

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

In his essay “On Truth and Lying in a non-moral sense” Nietzsche delves into the complicated web of “truth”. He sets the basis for the essay by explaining that our fundamental understanding of reality is a fallacy. This fallacy occurs because how we experience reality is through our language and cognition. He posits that language does not equate to reality. Language is a human construct that we developed to make palatable the unreal or that which we are cognizant of. Say, for example, I was to give you a green pear for breakfast. You are cognizant that it is a green pear. But how do you know this object is green? or a pear? Nietzsche suggests that there is no point of creation for anything we know to be a fact. Rather the things we considered facts are watered-down versions of themselves or what he calls “metaphors”. In which an object exists and to understand said object we have to associate it with one of our senses and so the object goes through many transformations because no one sensory experience outweighs another. Thus, the “green pear” essentially stems off into three categories—our visual image of the green pear, the words “green pear” and the actual green pear. Though all three categories are of the same object, not one of them correlates to one another. The way we view the green pear matches our cognition; the words “green pear” is our attempt to encage the object in the construct of language, and the green pear itself is “theoretically” a green pear because we know it to be a green pear—a green pear is a green pear because it is a green pear. Challenging this statement would lead us to the realization that we have no basis on which to call a green pear a green pear because we have no knowledge of its “essential quality”. Consequently, does any single one of these categories outweigh another? Or does any single category make another less true? No, because they all form parts of the truth, yet still parts of the truth do not equate to the “truth”. This, Nietzsche explains, is the ultimate fallacy. We are so far gone into our intrinsic belief of the truth that we have forgotten that the basis of what forms our truths (the former 3 categories) are deceptions. A paradox of sorts, because then that would make us “architects” of our truth, and would that then not make us the point of creation if our induvial realities are subject to our discretion? If I give you a green pear for breakfast and you say, “no this is not a green pear this is a purple raspberry”, does it much matter who is being honest and who is being deceitful? There is room enough for more than one truth because no one reality is a shared experience.

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Truth and lying Metaphor [posted for Yvonne]

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

In natural sense, on truth and lying on No-Moral Sense is literally can be taken as the truth. This might be the author’s conception of the word truth, which assumes to be beneficial. In one way the other it’s a metaphor because it’s not objective.
Respectively, truth might refer to amalgamation of conceptions and metaphor that might attune to physical stimuli or some objects as well as images. The drawback to misconception of truth is that we accept it, therefore we embrace it but have no knowledge about it. In respect, most of the things we assume to be truthful is not true. Truth is constructed and dwell on it and transport it further to make it sound truthful.
“Nietzsche, noted that truth might be evolutional nature” “He noted that clever animals invented cognition”. He declared that “truth and lying in a Non-Moral Sense”. Evolution by Darwin, which explained the appearance of the will to truth and the concept of truth itself. However, the idea of invention. It was noted that there was slyness in the clever animals who discovered cognition because it seemed the invention was fabricated so the implication was deceptive than what assumed to be truthful.
Apparently, “Evolution can be classified as survival of the fittest”. This might be truthful because “Evolution rewards the selfish first before other”. For instance, “a hunter who face an option of sharing or hoarding his kill”. Moreover, the hunter’s direct completion, evolution therefore is survival. The hoarding in context, is logical selection for evolution because it lead to direct increase of in fitness. In result, “hoarders increase in the society as a whole in a generation to come”. There would be an increase with evolution who would choose the gene set.
Truthfully, concepts are metaphors, which do not lead to reality. It is manufactured by humans to help facilitate communication. However, human beings forget fact after discovering it and turn around to “believe that it is the truth and reliable and correspond to reality”( Nietzsche 876). On the other way truths are illusions about which one has forgotten that is what they are. Finally, metaphor has no power, coin has lost its pictures and is a metal and no coins anymore. Truth and lies are human language and is manufactured by human. In a nutshell, the post- modem theory is “on the truth and lies in Non moral Sense”. Humans discover things and make it real.

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