The Canon – Inquisitive and Adaptive: A Re-Definition From the Perspective of Consistent Skepticism
The Canon – Inquisitive and Adaptive: A Re-Definition From the Perspective of Consistent Skepticism
Author(s): Caius DobrescuSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Literary Texts, Theory of Literature
Published by: Editura Casa Cărții de Știință
Keywords: Canon-building; indetermination; hazards; uncertainty; unpredictability; ambiguity; cultural conflict
Summary/Abstract: The problem of the canon has been traditionally seen as alluding to a form of explicit or implicit consistency. The traditional meaning of the canon depends on a sense of cohesiveness of values and norms, being connected to a given understanding of the architecture of the universe, in the manner in which per- and early amodern political philosophy used the notion of „constitution” with respect not to a textual corpus of principles and norms, but to the very structure of o society that „naturally” embodies principles and norms. In modern times, with the rise of the nation states, the canon is seen as a collection of remarkable, ground-breaking intellectual and artistic achievements, that are supposed to convene spontaneously on basic ethical orientations, or at least similar moral sentiments. My paper argues that this modes of construing the canon could be supplanted by a „negative” understanding of commonality and consistency. On the one hand, I propose that the mind of a literary epoch might be forged rather by the problems that the thinkers and artists resent as central (in a definition of centrality that equates it with: the most disquieting). On the other hand, I argue that the cohesiveness obtained through a literary canon is best understood as a community of doubt, a manner of circumscribing shared uncertainties and felt vulnerabilities, rather than a positive consensus.
Journal: Comunicare Interculturală și Literatură
- Issue Year: 23/2016
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 10-19
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English