KNOWLEDGE FOR THE 21ST CENTURY:
RE-VISITING THE LEAVIS/SNOW CONTROVERSY
KNOWLEDGE FOR THE 21ST CENTURY:
RE-VISITING THE LEAVIS/SNOW CONTROVERSY
Author(s): Lena PetrovićSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, Comparative Study of Literature, Philology
Published by: Универзитет у Крагујевцу
Keywords: F. R. Leavis; C. P. Snow; the humanities; literature; science; knowledge; university
Summary/Abstract: The paper is a response to an important observation Professor Darko Suvin made in 1999 that stances must ultimately depend on circumstances, and in particular to his warning that the circumstances marking the turn of the century demand a revision of our assumptions of what the knowledge that truly matters is. Now, as the circumstances shaping our social and political existence deteriorate, the concern about the diminishing role of humanist education as opposed to scientific or specialized training is voiced with increasing urgency and apprehension. Part of the changing paradigm within the cultural and literary studies is the will to re-assess the position of F. R. Leavis. Thus Leavis’s response to C.P. Snow’s Two Cultures, for several decades merely the object lesson in bad academic manners, is now being re-visited as an integral part of his life-long ’mental fight’ for the conception of humanist studies as the irreplaceable source of criteria that would counter the general tendency of what he called a technologico-Benthamite culture to misuse science in ways that cheapen, impoverish and dehumanize life. The Leavis/ Snow controversy, as well as the contemporary debate concerning the humanities, which I will argue in the concluding part of my paper, can be read as the latest version of the paradigm clash dramatically transposed in the stories of two archetypal knowers – Faustus and Prospero.
Journal: Липар - часопис за књижевност, језик, уметност и културу
- Issue Year: XVIII/2017
- Issue No: 63
- Page Range: 99-112
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English