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Doing What Comes Naturally:

Change, Rhetoric, and the Practice of Theory in Literary & Legal Studies
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2 Reviews
Duke University Press, May 8, 1989 - Literary Criticism - 613 pages
DIVIn literary theory, the philosophy of law, and the sociology of knowledge, no issue has been more central to current debate than the status of our interpretations. Do they rest on a ground of rationality or are they subjective impositions of a merely personal point of view? In Doing What Comes Naturally, Stanley Fish refuses the dilemma posed by this question and argues that while we can never separate our judgments from the contexts in which they are made, those judgments are nevertheless authoritative and even, in the only way that matters, objective. He thus rejects both the demand for an ahistorical foundation, and the conclusion that in the absence of such a foundation we reside in an indeterminate world. In a succession of provocative and wide-ranging chapters, Fish explores the implications of his position for our understanding of legal, literary, and psychoanalytic interpretation, the nature of professional and institutional culture, and the place of reason in a world that is rhetorical through and through./div
  

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Review: Doing What Comes Naturally: Change, Rhetoric, and the Practice of Theory in Literary & Legal Studies

User Review  - Matt - Goodreads

In the book Doing What Comes Naturally Stanley Fish introduces a plethora of contemporary issues that have controversy in regards to the realm of interpretation. In laymen s terms the question that ... Read full review

Review: Doing What Comes Naturally: Change, Rhetoric, and the Practice of Theory in Literary & Legal Studies

User Review  - PM Richard - Goodreads

In the book Doing What Comes Naturally Stanley Fish introduces a plethora of contemporary issues that have controversy in regards to the realm of interpretation. In laymen's terms the question that is ... Read full review

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Contents

Going Down the AntiFormalist Road
1
Meaning and Constraint
35
Professionalism
161
Consequences
313
Rhetoric
469
Notes
555
Index
595
Copyright

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About the author (1989)

Fredric R. Jameson, Marxist theorist and professor of comparative literature at Duke University, was born in Cleveland in 1934. He earned a Ph.D. from Harvard University and taught at Harvard, the University of California at San Diego, and Yale University before moving to Duke in 1985. He most famous work is Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, which won the Modern Language Association's Lowell Award. Jameson was among the first to associate a specific set of political and economic circumstances with the term postmodernism. His other books include Sartre: The Origin of a Style, The Seeds of Time, and The Cultural Turn.

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