Bauerlein on Eagleton
Mark Bauerlein had some thoughts on Terry Eagleton almost a decade ago.
[I]t is a mistake to treat social constructionism as preached in the academy as a philosophy. Though the position sounds like an epistemology, filled with glib denials of objectivity, truth, and facts backed up by in-the-know philosophical citations (“As Nietzsche says. . .”), its proponents hold those beliefs most unphilosophically. When someone holds a belief philosophically, he or she exposes it to arguments and evidence against it, and tries to mount arguments and evidence for it in return. But in academic contexts, constructionist ideas are not open for debate. They stand as community wisdom, articles of faith…Save for a few near-retirement humanists and realist philosopher holdouts, academics embrace constructionist premises as catechism learning, axioms to be assimilated before one is inducted into the professoriate. To believe that knowledge is a construct, that truth, evidence, fact, and inference all fall under the category of local interpretation, and that interpretations are more or less right by virtue of the interests they satisfy is a professional habit, not an intellectual thesis.
Take, he suggests a couple of pages later, Terry Eagleton’s Literary Theory: An Introduction for an example.
[T]he conceptual analysis is thin, the methodological description hasty. Instead, the book reads like a textbook case of commentary by genetic fallacy and ethical consequence. To the patient exposition of terms and concepts Eagleton prefers the oblique adumbration…In the chapter on post-structuralism, Eagleton spends little time detailing the arguments of founding tests like “Différence,” and instead strings together deconstructive platitudes…Literary Theory: An Introduction hardly counts as a serious discussion of literary theory, but its tactics have come to dominate humanities criticism. Commentaries on ideological origins and ethical results far exceed conceptual analyses and logical expositions. Evaluating concepts and arguments by their political backgrounds and implications has become a disciplinary wont, a pattern of inquiry.
Does it not sound familiar? Does it not sound like the Eagleton (and the Fish too) that we have just been reading, and gently but firmly disputing?
Constructionist notions have become so patent and revered that their articulation need no longer happen, except as reminders to professors who stray from the party line (many utterances begin with “We must remember that. . .”). Those who raise objections soon find themselves trapped in debates shaped by us versus them forensics, enunciated in an idiom of brazen philosophical avowals and insinuations about the character of adversaries. Non-constructionists feel not so much refuted, as ostracized. The humanities become a closed society, captive to a weak epistemology with a mighty elocution.
And the result apparently is that Eagleton and Fish manage to get through their entire careers without ever being compelled to argue properly, with the sad and poignant result that we see before us now – a couple of grizzled sages who think they’re making a case when they’re just making word salad.
That last line brightened up my day – I’m going to steal it for sure.
There is considerable irony that the likes of Eagleton and Fish consider the proposition that there is no such thing as truth to be a truism (to use Bauerlein’s term). Their whole intellectual edifice seems to be constructed on a gigantic liar paradox. If there are no objective facts, than how can what they say possibly be true?
Interesting piece you linked to.
“Commentaries on ideological origins and ethical results far exceed conceptual analyses and logical expositions”
C S Lewis noted the tendency in the 1940s of intellectuals examining statements not to see if they were true or not but how they were ideologically constructed. The two main ideologies of his day were Freudianism and Marxism. I would guess that Freudianism has fallen out of favour but that social constructionism is a descendant of Marxism.
Lewis called this Bulverism.
“Some day I am going the write the biography of its imaginary inventor, Ezekiel Bulver, whose destiny was determined at the age of five when he heard his mother say to his father – who had been maintaining that two sides of a triangle were together greater than the third – “Oh, you say that because you are a man.” “At that moment,” E. Bulver assures us, “there flashed across my opening mind the great truth that refutation is no necessary part of argument. Assume your opponent is wrong, and then explain his error, and the world will be at your feet. Attempt to prove that he is wrong or (worse still) try to find out whether he is wrong or right, and the national dynamism of our age will thrust you to the wall.” That is how Bulver became one of the makers of the Twentieth Century.
http://www.barking-moonbat.com/God_in_the_Dock.html
Yes, and if all texts are explicable by the social constructs of the day, aren’t their texts like that as well? Or do they somehow stand outside of the social constructs of the day.
You won’t get around them through that route, KB Player–they’ll happily admit their texts are unobjective, but that doesn’t matter, because logical consistency doesn’t matter.
That was quite the impressive take-down by Bauerlein.
How odd that C.S. Lewis of all people – talk about subordinating reason to ideology! – was so perceptive. Yet another intellectual who inspires me to say “Someone give that man a mirror! Stat!”
G – C S Lewis was a robust and honest Christian who believed in the operation of the supernatural in the natural world. He didn’t fudge this. He thought it could it be explained in intelligible language and with logical consistency. Eagleton is all fog and fudge and illogic.
Lewis did some pretty funny things, too. All that stuff posing a choice between Jesus as lunatic, liar or god with the possibility that something in the gospels wasn’t accurately reported (to put it mildly) not even considered.
Lewis did a lot of funny things. See John Beversluis’s excellent book-length study of Lewis’s apologetics, which I reviewed here a few months ago.
Stewart, when I encounter the Lunatic, Liar, or Lord question I like to maintain the alliteration and respond with: Legend?
Nice touch, Grendels Dad.
I don’t claim Lewis expertise on this; I’ve read the direct quotes about that in several places. Does anyone happen to know whether Lewis ever related to the all-important “Legend” possibility either in print or in any kind of debate-like situation (or even in reported private conversation, for that matter)?
“Another point is that on that view you would have to regard the accounts of the Man as being legends. Now, as a literary historian, I am perfectly convinced that whatever else the Gospels are they are not legends. I have read a great deal of legend and am quite clear that they are not the same sort of thing. They are not artistic enough to be legends. From an imaginative point of view they are clumsy, they don’t work up to things properly. Most of the life of Jesus is totally unknown to us, as is the life of anyone else who lived at that time, and no people building up a legend would allow that to be so. Apart from bits of the Platonic dialogues, there are no conversations that I know of in ancient literature like the Fourth Gospel. There is nothing, even in modern literature, until about a hundred years ago when the realistic novel came into existence. In the story of the woman taken in adultery we are told Christ bent down and scribbled in the dust with His finger. Nothing comes of this. No one has ever based any doctrine on it. And the art of inventing little irrelevant details to make an imaginary scene more convincing is a purely modern art. Surely the only explanation of this passage is that the thing really happened? The author put it simply because he had seen it.”
http://www.merelewis.com/CSL.gitd.1-19.WhatAreWeToMakeOfJesusChrist.htm
That is of course a ridiculous argument to anyone who has read even a few paragraphs of Jesus scholarship. It’s childishly ridiculous, because it simply ignores the very existence of the scholarship.
Lewis was a good literary scholar, really very worth reading. He was a crap theologian.
Thanks, KB. Would probably have found it eventually by slogging through googled irrelevancies, but I figured a question to this crowd would save me some time.
Having read it, what can I say? Makes me wonder how he’d have argued if he *hadn’t* *wanted* to believe in it.
I too may be a crap theologian OB, and I would value your suggestions of whose Jesus scholarship is worth reading.
I have read a couple (other than bible-thumpers I mean), but some seem almost as reliable as Von Daniken… Barbara Thiering for instance, who must be held as proof that current affairs journalists are incapable of presenting a ‘controversial’ author on their argument instead of their controversiality or celebrity.