Whither -- or why -- English in the Humanities | A Commonplace Blog
In 1952, at the height of his fame, F. R. Leavis entitled a collection of essays The Common Pursuit.
It was his name for the academic study of literature. No one takes the
idea seriously any more, but nor does anyone ask the obvious followup.
If English literature is not a common pursuit—not a “great
tradition,” to use Leavis’s other famous title—then what is it doing in
the curriculum? What is the rationale for studying it?
My own career (so called) suggests the answer. Namely: where there is no
common body of knowledge, no common disciplinary conceptions, there is
nothing that is indispensable. Any claim to expertise is arbitrary and
subject to dismissal.
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