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    STUDIA PHILOLOGIA - Issue no. 3 / 2022  
         
  Article:   INTERVIEW: BRIAN Ó CONCHUBHAIR.

Authors:  BRIAN Ó CONCHUBHAIR.
 
       
         
  Abstract:  DOI: 10.24193/subbphilo.2022.3.05

Available online: 20 September 2022; Available print: 30 September 2022
pp. 31-36

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Q: Literary history, be it national, local, or regional, is perhaps the most conservative form of literary study, with many claiming that the method is outmoded. What can literary histories do to overcome both the risk of obsolescence and their inherent conservatism?

A: Literary historians have grappled with this challenge since at least the early 1960s, a time when revolution was blowing in the wind, as demands for individual rights and freedoms came to the fore in the United States and on European campuses. In a 1963 essay entitled ‘Is Literary History Obsolete?’ College English (Vol. 24, No. 5) Robert E. Spiller addressed this question in the context of what was then an exciting and emerging ‘New criticism.’ His rebuttal, some six decades later, merits consideration. There is, he contends, a process of cross-breeding between two or more kinds of history. Events in one area of human experience have a habit of growing out of conditions in other areas. He cites, as examples: the French revolution and A Tale of Two Cities, and American whaling and Moby Dick. Similarly, he argues, significant historical events relate to one or more key personalities whose thoughts and actions precipitated it: battles are always associated with generals (Washington, Wellington or Lee); political events with statesmen (Gladstone, Webster, Bismarck) and changes in the history of thought with thinkers (Locke, Darwin or Marx). Spiller expressed concerns at aesthetic, rhetorical and linguistic analysis dominating basic college textbooks and required courses to the near exclusion of the survey or background course.
 
         
     
         
         
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