Langbeschreibung
Eugene Goodheart's book is as direct as its title: Does Literary Studies Have a Future? As we approach the end of a millennium, the battle for the fate of literary scholarship has taken on near apocalyptic overtones, with more than a few predictions of the imminent end of literary studies as we know it. In such an environment, Goodheart's thoughtful and provocative book is sure to cause a stir. Taking aim at culture warriors on the left and the right, Goodheart provides a succinct and timely assessment of the current state and the future of literary studies in the United States. He argues that the battles that have been fought over tradition, the canon, aesthetics, and objectivity not only distort the issues at stake, but guarantee that nothing fruitful can emerge from the battles. For Goodheart, the opposition between tradition (the cause of the right) and innovation (the cause of the left) is essentially false: tradition is an interactive history between the given and innovation, not an inert set of values or a stable canon of approved texts.