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Silent Subversion: an Indictment Silent Subversion: an Indictment
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Rehearing Silence: Subversion and the Pittite Containment Rehearing Silence: Subversion and the Pittite Containment
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Toward a Theory of Subversion Toward a Theory of Subversion
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2 Trying Cultural Criticism: Wordsworth and Subversion
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Published:November 2008
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Abstract
This chapter offers two concurrent investigations, the first of which is a reexplanation, by means of the subversion/containment analytic, of William Wordsworth's turn from radicalism in the aftermath of the 1789 Revolution. The second is an examination of the revolution manqué expressed in the subversion/containment analytic itself, specifically as spoken by cultural criticism in its American New Historicist or Representations inflection. In an age when absolute knowledge and/or dialectical materialism has become the “interpretation of cultures,” with its exclusive attention to symbol, display, and representation, the dynamics of lordship/bondage is itself bound. It is “décor, gadget culturel” contained within a room of larger interpretive possibilities. The chapter's thesis is this: if there is a cultural fallacy, pace the New Critical biographical fallacy, it lies in the constrictive interpretation of social representations empowered by the notion of the subject.
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