Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Discourse

Just as a fair warning, this is not one of those posts I have worked out in my head and then stick here wholly formed and funny. This is one where a few things are milling about in my head and I try to figure out why they all seem related to me. 1. Here in the university world, we often talk about the Crisis in Scholarly Publishing. Basically, what this amounts to is that, though people still need to publish books in order to get tenure, the economic reality of the university press is such that books need to make money for presses and books with an audience of 200 don't make money. One solution that's always tossed around is doing electronic-only versions of books, because some people are under the mistaken impression that the cost of a book is bound up in its physicality. The other solution, and one I only hear talked about in jest, is that people need to buy more books. The problem with this solution is that most scholarly books are so difficult to read that no one in her right mind would buy them if she didn't feel she had to in order to keep up with her field. I must say that nothing fills me more with dismay and amusement than seeing the ways that people who love literature train themselves to write in ways incapable of expressing that love. If you love good writing that speaks to a wide audience, why don't you learn to be a good writer that speaks to a wide audience about that love? Why must you turn the study of literature into some secret club where people who don't know the meaning of praxis and hegemony can never enter? 2. One thing that's been sticking with me from Sherman's March is this scene where this guy has a Biblical flow chart and he's trying to explain to the cameraman that the endtimes are near. And it strikes me because I've seen it played out so often in real life, where someone will say something and the person he's talking to will say, "Well, Revelations 3.11 says..." and they just go on as if that's a perfectly normal response to have to a crisis or question or whatever. I've had these kinds of conversations before, where I'll be making a point about, say, feminism and someone will say to me "Ephesians 5.22" as if that settles the matter. The weirdest part about it--and I think this is well-reflected in the movie--is that, again, it's like this secret club. If you have the right background and belief system, just saying the Bible verse is enough to reaffirm your rightness. And you and other members of your club can get together with your secret maps or your books and reaffirm for each other how you have this great secret few others share. 3. This really burns me about political discourse as well. I noticed it recently perusing Nashville is Talking and Pith in the Wind and other political weblogs and seeing that the exact same arguments happen over and over again, and when I say exact, I mean, I start to wonder just where everyone goes each morning to get the Democrat or Republican talking points each day. If I read enough of it, I start to feel like the arguments are larger than the individual people having them, that somehow, once those folks know what the party line is, their own individual selves fall away and it's just these talking points in dialog. And, as amazing as that is to watch, it's also frustrating. It reduces politics to a sport and us to mere fans who pick a team and stick with it through right or wrong. But it doesn't get us anywhere. Forget changing minds, we're no closer to understanding each other because we aren't actually conversing. We have no idea how to hear people who believe differently than us. I keep saying to my scholars that I don't give a shit how you prove Foucault right. He proves you right or you prove him wrong, or he doesn't get to be in your book. And I don't give a shit what it says in the Bible about what my role in society should be. You look me right in the face and see me as a whole human being and then try to tell me I need a governmental Daddy in ways you'd refuse to accept for yourself. Put down your Republican or Democratic party lines and speak to me from your heart and I will speak to you from mine. I probably won't change your mind, and you probably won't change mine, but at least we can finally hear each other, instead of this regurgitated bullshit. It's funny, sadly funny, the ways in which we camouflage our desire to not have to think and be open and possibly wrong through reading and writing, the very things we think of as being revolutionary aids to communication.

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

You are so right!!
I'm so tired of people who are "standing up for what they believe" when it is all a bunch of crap that someone else is telling them to say!
Can we all have original ideas and reasons we don't like things?

8/02/2005 08:22:00 PM  
Blogger frog said...

Interesting. I work in academia, too, and encouragement of books is saved for people who already have tenure. The tenure process here is ALL about peer-reviewed journal articles and the occasional chapter.

If a junior faculty member publishes a book, they pretty much do so at their own risk.

8/03/2005 07:43:00 AM  
Blogger Aunt B said...

Wow, how does that work? I guess if you don't have anything to compare it to, you might not know, but I wonder if faculty find that less stressful or about the same.

I keep advocating, every chance I get, for a complete reconception of the dissertation. Instead of making people write this one thing in a way they'll never have to write again, why don't they use this time to help grad students get a real polished draft of a book? If indeed they really want young faculty members to publish books...

8/03/2005 08:29:00 AM  
Blogger Kat Coble said...

"If you love good writing that speaks to a wide audience, why don't you learn to be a good writer that speaks to a wide audience about that love? Why must you turn the study of literature into some secret club where people who don't know the meaning of praxis and hegemony can never enter?
"

I think it's because most writers are insecure about themselves and their craft. We like to admire the beauty of literature, but the safety that comes from hiding behind softscience words keeps us from having to write things that are real. Real writing is painful. Academic writing about writing is kinda fun and a bit show-offy.

You haven't lived the definition of excruciating until you've been in an MFA writing workshop.

8/04/2005 01:44:00 PM  

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