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Volume 36 • Number 1

Spring 2002



 

CONSTRUCTIVE POSTMODERNISM: TOWARD RENEWAL IN CULTURAL AND LITERARY STUDIES, by Martin Schiralli. Westport, Connecticut and London: Bergin & Garvey, 1999, 165pp., $55.


Concerned with the consequences of Jacques Derrida's philosophy of deconstruction for cultural and literary studies, Martin Schiralli's elegantly written book offers first a critique of these claims, and then a constructive alternative analysis. He admires Derrida's brilliantly innovative writing, which as he rightly notes is "serious and philosophical" even if "even the most patient reader can easily become disoriented and confused" (p. 24). But even if, as Derrida argues, Ferdinard de Saussure's theory of meaning is flawed, we need not—he urges—become deconstructionists. Looking to the work of Stephen Toulmin, John Dewey, and late Wittgenstein, Schiralli finds suggestive ways of identifying concerns with cognitive value in literary texts. It then is possible, he argues, to offer a more reasonable perspective on recent debates about culture and politics than the recent academic arguments between "postmodern revisionists…[and] often hostile and defensive traditionalists" (p. 73).




David Carrier
Case Western Reserve University/
Cleveland Institute of Art


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