| A Review of: Uncommon Readers: Denis Donoghue, Frank Kermode, George Steiner and the Tradition of the Common Reader by Eric MillerChristopher J. Knight's Uncommon Readers celebrates three strong
intellects that have expressed themselves extensively in the format
of the review-Denis Donoghue, Frank Kermode and George Steiner. The
celebration is also an intermittent critique, on the understanding
that opposition is sometimes true friendship. For Knight, each of
these critics has, at the heart of his generous attention, a
characterizing emphasis-Donoghue on the imagination, Kermode on
canonicity, Steiner on elegy.
To compose a long book (Knight's work runs to 506 pages) about the
short form of the review may appear a suspiciously paradoxical
project. But this is to overlook how every period endorses a hierarchy
of genres. This hierarchy changes over time. Genres sink or rise,
vanish or emerge. The novel perhaps now occupies the heights of the
hierarchy. But, if we think about genres in terms of the actual
pleasure each may offer, our real literary experience appears in a
refreshed light. A decent review often bestows as much happiness
as a poem or a short story. When we read fiction, we undertake to
learn the names of unreal characters and of non-existent places.
Reviews compel us to do something similar. When we read them, we
often absorb verdicts on writers whom we may never read. The nexus
of reference remains alien to us, or familiar to us only through
the review. What we savour is the delivery of judgements-a rhythm
in the fashioning of a critique that probably has analogies with
music.
Knight rightly says, "We can each probably draw up our own
list of reviewers whose works, serially read, mean as much to us
as that of even justly admired novelists."
Enjoyment arises from noting the skill with which a reviewer responds
to the medium's epigrammatic constraint and to the necessity of
quoting appositely from the work under consideration, a necessity
that creates on the spot a miniature anthology to serve an evidentiary
role. Donoghue, Kermode and Steiner are masters of this form.
Knight's Uncommon Readers is at once easy to describe and somewhat
dumbfounding. The book is too long, although it offers a brave and
impassioned critical account of Donoghue's, Kermode's and Steiner's
careers. A writer who composes a great number of reviews over a
long span of time has something in common with a character in an
epistolary novel: he or she appears, always, as the author of a
unit (the particular review) and of an opus (the succession of
reviews, each prospectively and retrospectively modifying the
others). Knight reminds us toward the end of his book, "We are
each provincial in one way or another, and sometimes the best thing
we can do for one another is to take note of the fact." The
review as a genre, too slight to articulate a grand theory,
acknowledges its own provinciality. Knight subdues the problem of
miscellaneousness-a trait that he celebrates, for its freedom from
allegiance to any school-by addressing similar motifs in the lifework
of his writers. Donoghue, Kermode and Steiner address religion,
deconstruction, the literary canon and the idea of inwardness.
Knight can throw the threefold light cast by his authors on these
compelling concerns.
When Knight acknowledges the inevitable provinciality of anyone's
intellect, he accepts that all thought is provisional-which is not
the same as a disavowal of commitment. Influenced by the practice
of Donoghue, Kermode and Steiner, Knight claims "if we have
not already lived and thought in the realm of the imaginary, we
probably make bad determinations in that of the real." He
rebukes the moral haste, the righteous failure of imagination that
distorts the findings of much contemporary literary scholarship,
fating it to the repetitive (though plausible) disclosure of
prejudice. He prefers judgements to be held in abeyance for as long
as possible. He deplores "the ethical implications of reducing,
by means of tabloid-like attention, Hawthorne to a misogynist,
Melville to a wife-beater, Whitman to a racist, Conrad to an
imperialist, Eliot to an anti-Semite, and Bellow to a racist."
Knight opposes the business-school ethos that reduces scholarship
in the universities to what the slick call "the profession."
He remarks, "The study of literature has gone corporate, and
if one does not wish to be left out, one needs to get with the
program. There is little, or no, space for those lacking a corporate
identification card." A review of the kind that Donoghue,
Kermode or Steiner writes constitutes no such identification card-not
even the torn scraps of one. Hence its attractions for Knight. He
cherishes the eccentric exertions of "one mind" over
against the enforcement of obligatory teamwork. Uncommon Minds
supports Knight's convictions, because the exemplary Donoghue,
Kermode and Steiner all display the simultaneous universality and
idiosyncrasy that goes with the role of the reviewer. Such a person
goes in lieu of us, presumably representing us-and yet he or she
implicitly claims exceptionality, a judge's vertiginous rights
precariously held.
One great delight of Knight's book is its central conceit, of
bringing within one binding the intellectual worlds of Donoghue,
Kermode and Steiner. In the nineteenth century, many people kept
"commonplace books"-collections of their own favourite
quotations lovingly copied out. Knight's Uncommon Minds is, in one
sense, a contemporary commonplace book. In the interstices between
contentious quotations from Donoghue, Kermode and Steiner is Knight's
own polemic against present tendencies in the university. Real
pleasure derives from Knight's choice of excerpts. Here is Steiner:
"Because it carries the past within it, language, unlike
mathematics, draws backward. This is the meaning of Eurydice."
Here is Georg Simmel, an influence on Donoghue: "every day and
from all sides the wealth of objective culture increases, but the
individual mind can enrich the forms and contents of its own
development only by distancing itself still further from that culture
and developing its own at a much slower pace." Here is Kermode:
"I made mistakes but I regret none of that, for the life of
intelligent poetry and criticism is a life of error twinned with
truth-like twins, they quarrel and are interdependent."
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