Tuesday, January 19, 2010

A Pitch of Philosophy: Autobiographical Exercises

A Pitch of Philosophy: Autobiographical Exercises








A Pitch of Philosophy: Autobiographical Exercises (The Jerusalem-Harvard Lectures) by Stanley Cavell
Publisher: Harvard University Press 1996-02-01 |  ISBN: 0674669819 |

This work is an introduction to the life of philosophy in the United States, as Emerson once lived it, in all its topographical ambiguity.





Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Cavell is an odd man out at Harvard-a philosopher with a taste for romanticism and an interest in rhetoric. He was especially moved by J.L. Austin's How To Do Things with Words (1975), one kind of Oxford "ordinary language" philosophy, but he developed his own critique. Lately, he is best known as the man who restored Emerson and Thoreau to philosophical respectability; hence his concern with having one's own voice in the sense of being heard in one's own way and with being a philosopher who makes a difference. The book offers us charming snippets of his life-the child writing pawn tickets for his father or listening to his pianist mother on the radio, the young man giving up the study of composition at the Juilliard School. And it shows the philosopher caught between deflationist beliefs about metaphysics and romantic beliefs about individualism. But Cavell's readings of philosophers famous and obscure (Derrida, Wittgenstein, Austin, Roderick Firth, Benson Mates) are never quite usual, and the snippets here are too brief and flickering to allow the reader to take their measure. Those who know Cavell's work and the works he speaks of will enjoy the book. Others will be baffled. For academic libraries.
Leslie Armour, Univ. of Ottawa
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


Review

The autobiographical note of Cavell's philosophy, here as in his other writings, evokes an atmosphere of fragility and danger...Whether in the discussion of the haunting of Hamlet, or in the analysis of inheritance in the film Gaslight in which `something is resounding', or even in the reflections on the `necessarily forged' signatures of ghosts, Cavell presents an understated but powerful analysis of a world and a self haunted by voices...Cavell's work extends philosophy into other domains...His autobiographical exercises exemplify `humane criticism' applied to philosophy, remaining true to the technical demands of the discipline and paying heed to the claims of the experience that sustains it.
--Howard Caygill (Times Higher Education Supplement )

Stanley Cavell is among the very few philosophers in America to have achieved a major reputation primarily through writing on the arts, and perhaps the only one to have evolved a prose style that has something of the character of artistic expression in its own right...The author's voice kept--keeps--ringing in my inadequately pitched ear.
--Arthur C. Danto (ArtForum )

Cavell has carried on the tradition of Wittgenstein and John Austin into new areas of philosophy and literature...The present work is both an intellectual autobiography and a philosophy of the autobiography, in which he defends the authority of the personal voice. Of most philosophical interest is a long account, part actual, part possible, of an exchange between Austin and Derrida with Cavell's own voice as adjudicator much in evidence. (Choice )

This is A Cavell's Progress. A reworking of his lifework themes intimating how the diverse parts, which might seem unconnected from the outside, are felt as of a piece. In philosophy, the discovery of Austin, the understanding of Wittgenstein, the raising of Emerson to the philosophical canon, the fascination with film, with images of women in a medium for women, the revelation that film and opera are the mediums of otherness for women. All this hung together with much intense family reminiscence, of Cavell choosing at sixteen his name, much about his mother the musician, about his father and the pawn shop.
--Ian Hacking, University of Toronto

The result of Cavell's struggle to defend the Austinian heritage, in its 'democratic' defense of the ordinary, by restoring the distinctive voice and tone that he takes Derrida to neglect is to my knowledge the most suggestive discussion of the distinctive status of tone and voice in response to the two philosophical traditions epitomized, however ironically, by Derrida and Austin.
--Samuel Weber, UCLA



Details

Paperback: 216 pages
Publisher: Harvard University Press (February 1, 1996)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0674669819
 ISBN-13: 978-0674669819

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