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SCA
Culture@Large 2003
presents:
Professor
John Guillory (NYU Dept. of English)
"Reading for a Living: Some Observations on the
Differences Between Lay and Professional Reading”
Saturday, November 22nd, 1:45--5:30 pm
Continental Ballroom C
Discussants:
Virginia Dominguez, Richard Handler, James Collins, and George
Marcus.
Professor
Guillory describes his paper as follows:
This paper explores the difference between the reading
practices of academic literary critics, or "professional”
readers, and those of “lay” readers, who read
works of literature primarily for enjoyment. I argue that
the distinction between professional and lay reading is a
consequence of what Burton Bledstein calls the “culture
of professionalism,” and that reading is necessarily
constructed in the academic field as a kind of work. This
labor of interpretation is founded on the systematic alienation
and misrecognition of lay reading, or the reduction of lay
reading to “non-reading,” a failure to read. Proposing
instead that lay reading survives in professional reading
in what I call an “encysted” form, I propose to
recover a better sense of what lay reading is in modernity,
from the time of its emergence in the early modern period,
when the figure of the lay reader first appears, to the present,
when literacy is presumed to be nearly universal. I suggest
that lay reading in modernity is best understood as an “ethical”
practice, by which I mean a practice of self-improvement based
immediately on the cultivation of a specific pleasure. Such
an ethical practice of reading appears to be just the opposite
of reading among professionals, which assumes a practice of
reading that entails suspicion or deferral of pleasure on
behalf of an ascetic or laborious technique of interpretation.
I conclude by arguing for the peculiarity of literary criticism
as the discipline that internalizes in its reading practice
the distinction between lay person and professional, a distinction
that underlies the formation of all of the disciplines.
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