From reviews of the first edition?"Academic literary crticism continues to be dominated by 'theory' and the struggle between deconstructionist and humanist approaches to the business of reading. Jonathan Culler's On Deconstruction is a typically patient, thoughtful, illuminating exposition of the ideas of Jacques Derrida and their application to literary studies."-David Lodge, Commonwealth"Culler is lucid and thorough, can move into and out of other people's arguments without losing the sense of his own voice and argument, and can manage to seem equally at home with Freudianism, feminism, and traditional literary criticism."-Times Literary Supplement"As a practicing critic Culler has always been a deconstructor, and he approaches this topic with special immediacy and force. In On Deconstruction he offers generous summaries of numerous representative articles and a fine annotated bibliography. . . . His magisterial way of tracing particular topics and techniques through our diaspora of
Culler's Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of Literature won the James Russell Lowell Prize from the Modern Language Association of America in 1976 for an outstanding book of criticism. Structuralist Poetics was one of the first introductions to the French structuralist movement available in English.
Culler’s contribution to the Very Short Introductions series, Literary Theory: A Very Short Introduction, received praise for its innovative technique of organization. Instead of chapters to schools and their methods, the book's eight chapters address issues and problems of literary theory.
In The Literary in Theory (2007) Culler discusses the notion of Theory and literary history’s role in the larger realm of literary and cultural theory. He defines Theory as an interdisciplinary body of work including structuralist linguistics, anthropology, Marxism, semiotics, psychoanalysis, and literary criticism.
While I wish that this had gone deeper on the Heidegger connection if we were going to spend so much time on Derrida, I do enjoy this as an overview of the different schools of literary criticism that fall under the "deconstructionist" umbrella. I particularly appreciate Culler pointing out how fluid the boundaries between different camps has been over the last 70 years
This is a magisterial work. It combines Culler's clear explication and straightforward style with his expansive reading and comprehensive grasp of critical theory. He provides many summaries of the works of deconstructive theorists as well as many lengthy quotations followed by explications. The book's main aim seems to be a survey of the many aspects of deconstruction, although Culler often offers his own corrections and elucidations. This is a handbook that covers the main bases: Derrida, Hillis Miller, De Man, feminist deconstruction (although the approach is largely thematic, not by theorist). There is a wealth of great theoretical knowledge here. I was already convinced of the value (it feels wrong to say validity) of deconstruction, but this book gives a glimpse at the impressive depths and breadth of which deconstruction is capable and provides many refutations to those who are convinced that deconstruction is just a process of making everything mean nothing (or nothing mean everything). Culler even prepares for those purists who will suggest deconstruction is best when taken from the fount of Derrida himself by pointing out that his own "misreading" of Derrida is not in fact a derisive term when one recognizes that all readings are misreadings. Culler ends with a brief apologetic for setting out a methodology so steeped in contradiction and conflict in such clear, unequivocal terms, but I certainly appreciate his effort and feel all the wiser for having read it.
I read this after Culler's 'Structuralist Poetics' book, and it's more or less more of the same: excellent exposition of the theory in question, which reads like walking through knee deep oatmeal. What's odd is that you'd expect a book like this to be full of 60's French nonsense prose. Instead, it's clear but extraordinarily dull Anglo-academic prose. I doubt there's a better introduction, although I'm not sold on his claim that the post-structuralism/structuralism distinction is unhelpful.
Whew.....I finished this book. That's gotta say something right? I didn't understand a lot of it and I think it's due to my lack of knowledge in literary criticism and theory as well as my lack of knowledge in Deconstruction and Derrida in general. I was hoping for an intro that would elucidate deconstruction for me; I don't think this did it. There were definitely sections I was able to grasp and I have a more muddied and nuanced understanding of deconstruction, but I still feel like I'm pulling at strings or groping in the dark. I was thinking I'd just read some Derrida next. Any thoughts on good intro stuff to this kind of theory? By the end, my gut was telling me deconstruction was shit. I was reminded by another friend that sometimes our guts are able to tell more truth than we give them credit for. Thanks friend.
A blurb on the back cover begins "In the contentious field of literary criticism, deconstruction - often condemned as impenetrable, self-indulgent, mechanical, or nihilistic..." Alas, this book does little to change that perception and a lot to support it.
Divided into three sections or long chapters, the third is the clearest (least unclear) and most penetrable. The first two chapters suffer from many problems, and for the most part make you feel like you're coming late to a conversation that started years and books ago. At no point I can recall does the author offer a definition or starting point for deconstruction. These two chapters read like an endless string of pronouncements, without supporting information or discussion. Culler worsens "the read" by an almost complete lack of examples or basis for his declarations, and frequent use of obscure terminology.
The third chapter is a good deal more digestible and manages to discuss deconstruction with reference to examples, notably Melville's "Billy Budd" and a poem by Thoreau. Despite this, I could not tell whether and where Culler actually believes this stuff -- largely Derrida and de Man's writings. It certainly seems clear that their declarations that no text is readable leaves open the question of whether there is any practical use or value to deconstruction. The style throughout the book is rambling, and if Culler ever made it to a thesis, it eluded this reader.
So it seems most discussions about Derrida composed after circa 1985 reference Culler almost as much as they do Derrida himself. Makes me suspect that contemporary opinion on the esoterica of Derrideism might in fact be misdiagnosed Culleranism. Which is fine by me, I think I prefer Culler to JD.
Ah, post-structuralism. I am glad I challenged myself to read such a book in the summer. Culler's humanistic approach to criticism challenged the older approach to literature, focusing on culture, linguistics AND literary meaning.
This book saved me, at least academically speaking. Great book for understanding deconstruction. Culler is great at explaining stuff, although deconstruction is not exactly easy to comprehend at first.
I love this book! If you want to understand poststructuralism (or just make impressive smalltalk at cocktail parties) this book makes it all seem lucid.