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    Fail Better: The Aesthetics of Contemporary Criticism

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    TETDEDXSchmid-temple-0225E-117 ...
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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2014
    Author
    Schmid, Erica
    Advisor
    O'Hara, Daniel T., 1948-
    Committee member
    Singer, Alan, 1948-
    Levitt, Laura, 1960-
    Alpert, Rebecca T. (Rebecca Trachtenberg), 1950-
    Department
    English
    Subject
    Literature, Modern
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/3534
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/3516
    Abstract
    Though literature and literary study have needed defense for most of their respective histories, the current crisis in academic literary study and the humanities more generally has forced scholars into the uncomfortable position of selling their disciplines and simultaneously warning students about the risks involved in earning what the dominant public considers to be "useless" degrees. The paradox, of course, is that dissuading would-be studiers is both ethical and destructive: it is necessary to inform students of the frightful instability of careers in literary study, but doing so renders such careers even more unstable. While some argue that the decline of the discipline is a result of practices within the discipline, I suggest that the root of the problem lies in the dominant discourse, which forces scholars to defend the discipline according to dominant notions of success. Using Frank Lentricchia's "Last Will and Testament of an Ex-Literary Critic" as a hinge between discussions of the value of literary study and elaborations of the antisocial thesis in queer theory, I contend that the discipline is not socially valued for the same reason it is socially valuable: it facilitates the pleasure of experiencing and envisioning new possibilities in and through the circulation of discourse. Since this aim does not (easily) translate into wealth accumulation or employability, it does not read as "success" and therefore the discipline has difficulty being socially valued. Rather than explaining the various benefits of earning a degree in literature, I argue that the discipline should embrace (its) failure as both a challenge to and re-imagining of dominant notions of success.
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