未命名 3
Carlos G. Tee (鄭永康)摘要
Some
Reactions to
“The Crisis
of Comparative Literature” by René Wellek
Published in 1959,
this article by René Wellek, written in strong, forceful words,
criticizes the French school of
comparative literature for its confined system and obsolete methodology.
To illustrate the state of the discipline at that time,
Wellek called the situation a crisis.
In this article, although he criticized the French branch of comparative
literature for its many deficiencies, the general tone readable between the
lines was that he considered the French school a part of the global community of
comparative literature as a whole. Wellek's allusion to a crisis was not meant
to refer to the discipline as practiced in the United States but he was in fact
pointing an accusing finger at the “rotten” French part of the metaphorical
apple. Although he had migrated to the
US by the time he wrote this piece, as a
European by birth, Wellek did not show a parochial attitude by just limiting his
views on comparative literature as practiced in his newly adopted country.
In addition to pinpointing the many maladies of French
comparative literature, Wellek spent many paragraphs criticizing Paul van Tieghem by reciting a litany of errors in the French camp.
The reason for singling out Van Tieghem was obvious: the clout enjoyed by the
Frenchman in his native country and Europe at that time. He was said to have had
many followers in his adamant adoption of
positivistic factualism and other such approaches.
One of the striking points in the article was when
Wellek reminded us of the origins of
comparative literature; that it arose as a reaction to narrow-minded nationalism
prevalent in 19th Century France. How
ironical it is that only half a
century later (at the time of Wellek's writing), French comparative literature
was being criticized for putting lopsided emphasis on influence studies and what
Wellek labeled as “cultural book-keeping”
as the French had a way of drawing attention to high levels of achievements in
their literature of the preceding centuries.
Towards the last third of the paper, Wellek's
defense of the open, multidisciplinary approach of the American school
and its emphasis on criticism sounds so prognostic, that is, as we now look
back at how comparative literature in America has developed in later
decades. Several years after the publication of this paper, Wellek's views are
echoed in the ACLA (American Comparative Literature Association)
Levin Report of 1960 by its call for
greater emphasis on critical methodology and internationalism (Levin 25), among
others.
Quite apparently, Wellek's words found eager ears in the
American comparative literature community that the directions he pointed out and
the warning signs he posted were well heeded. In an increasing trend, his
positions on how the discipline should move forward were adopted in the ACLA
Greene and Bernheimer Reports, issued in
1975 and 1993 respectively. The American school
of comparative literature has since then developed towards a more pluralistic
and multidisciplinary direction.
A crisis is not always to be viewed in a negative way. In any
organization, setting, country, or even, individual,
a crisis is an opportunity to reflect, and for reform and repositioning
of one's priorities. Only the illogically stubborn and the misfits end up
being sure losers in a crisis.
Works Cited
Wellek, René. “The Crisis of Comparative Literature.”
Comparative Literature: Proceedings of the
Second Congress of the ICLA. Ed. W. P. Friederich. 2 vols. Chapel Hill: U of
Carolina P, 2:149-59.
Levin, Harry et al. “The Levin Report, 1965: Report on
Professional Standards.” Comparative
Literature in the Age of Multiculturalism. Ed. Charles Bernheimer.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1994, 21-7.
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