Carver, Cavell, and the Uncanniness of the Ordinary

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dc.contributor.author Forsberg, Anders Niklas cze
dc.date.accessioned 2019-05-22T08:37:34Z
dc.date.available 2019-05-22T08:37:34Z
dc.date.issued 2018 eng
dc.identifier.issn 0028-6087 eng
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10195/72787
dc.description.abstract A predominant misunderstanding of the philosophical importance of paying attention to our ordinary language is that it supplies us with a standard of correctness. In contrast to this view, it is arguedhere that everyday and ordinary language are so difficult to bring into view and that this is something both J. L. Austin and Ludwig Wittgenstein maintained as well. It is precisely the failure to notice these kinds of difficulties that often leads philosophers into philosophical problems and metaphysical speculation. The philosopher who most clearly has stressed that "the everyday" is something difficult to get into view is Stanley Cavell, and he has also linked the concept of the ordinary to the Freudian concept of the uncanny. The idea of the "Unheimlich" contains the suggestion that there is something uncanny about that which is open to view because it is open to view. Thus, if the real problem with "ordinary language" is that we philosophers take ourselves to be in full command of our everyday language already and need not think more about it, then a presentation of our own familiar language that presents the familiar as something unfamiliar, the homely as strange, might be exactly what philosophy needs. This is one thing Raymond Carver's short stories achieve. The instability and flexibility here discerned does not warrant philosophico-theoretical "correction," but is rather a place where the complex, nuanced, and morally charged nature of our ordinary language comes into view. We are vulnerable to each other's wordings, but that vulnerability may itself be the very bond that holds us together. eng
dc.format p. 1-22 eng
dc.language.iso eng eng
dc.publisher Johns Hopkins University eng
dc.relation.ispartof New literary history, volume 49, issue: 1 eng
dc.rights pouze v rámci univerzity eng
dc.subject Raymond Carver eng
dc.subject Stanley Cavell eng
dc.subject Ordinary Language Philosophy eng
dc.subject Moral clarity eng
dc.subject Moral language eng
dc.subject vunerability eng
dc.title Carver, Cavell, and the Uncanniness of the Ordinary eng
dc.title.alternative Carver, Cavell, and the Uncanniness of the Ordinary cze
dc.type article eng
dc.description.abstract-translated A predominant misunderstanding of the philosophical importance of paying attention to our ordinary language is that it supplies us with a standard of correctness. In contrast to this view, it is arguedhere that everyday and ordinary language are so difficult to bring into view and that this is something both J. L. Austin and Ludwig Wittgenstein maintained as well. It is precisely the failure to notice these kinds of difficulties that often leads philosophers into philosophical problems and metaphysical speculation. The philosopher who most clearly has stressed that "the everyday" is something difficult to get into view is Stanley Cavell, and he has also linked the concept of the ordinary to the Freudian concept of the uncanny. The idea of the "Unheimlich" contains the suggestion that there is something uncanny about that which is open to view because it is open to view. Thus, if the real problem with "ordinary language" is that we philosophers take ourselves to be in full command of our everyday language already and need not think more about it, then a presentation of our own familiar language that presents the familiar as something unfamiliar, the homely as strange, might be exactly what philosophy needs. This is one thing Raymond Carver's short stories achieve. The instability and flexibility here discerned does not warrant philosophico-theoretical "correction," but is rather a place where the complex, nuanced, and morally charged nature of our ordinary language comes into view. We are vulnerable to each other's wordings, but that vulnerability may itself be the very bond that holds us together. cze
dc.peerreviewed yes eng
dc.publicationstatus published eng
dc.identifier.doi 10.1353/nlh.2018.0000 eng
dc.project.ID EF15_003/0000425/Centrum pro etiku jako studium hodnoty člověka eng
dc.identifier.wos 000430146700001 eng
dc.identifier.obd 39882122 eng


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