Contemporary literary theory takes truth and meaning to be dependent on shared conventions in a community of discourse and views authors' intentions as irrelevant to interpretation. This view, argues Reed Way Dasenbrock, owes much to Anglo-American analytic philosophy as developed in the 1950s and 1960s by such thinkers as Austin and Kuhn, but it ignores more recent work by philosophers like Davidson and Putnam, who have mounted a counterattack on this earlier conventionalism.
This book draws on current analytic philosophy to resuscitate the notion of objective truth and...
Contemporary literary theory takes truth and meaning to be dependent on shared conventions in a community of discourse and views authors' intention...