[HTML][HTML] Critique and the Hermeneutics of Suspicion

R Felski - M/C Journal, 2012 - journal.media-culture.org.au
M/C Journal, 2012journal.media-culture.org.au
Anyone contemplating the role of a “hermeneutics of suspicion” in literary and cultural
studies must concede that the phrase is rarely used—even by its most devout practitioners,
who usually think of themselves engaged in something called “critique.” What, then, are the
terminological differences between “critique” and “the hermeneutics of suspicion”? What
intellectual worlds do these specific terms conjure up, and how do these worlds converge or
diverge? And what is the rationale for preferring one term over the other?The “hermeneutics …
Anyone contemplating the role of a “hermeneutics of suspicion” in literary and cultural studies must concede that the phrase is rarely used—even by its most devout practitioners, who usually think of themselves engaged in something called “critique.” What, then, are the terminological differences between “critique” and “the hermeneutics of suspicion”? What intellectual worlds do these specific terms conjure up, and how do these worlds converge or diverge? And what is the rationale for preferring one term over the other?
The “hermeneutics of suspicion” is a phrase coined by Paul Ricoeur to capture a common spirit that pervades the writings of Marx, Freud, and Nietzsche. In spite of their obvious differences, he argued, these thinkers jointly constitute a “school of suspicion.” That is to say, they share a commitment to unmasking “the lies and illusions of consciousness;” they are the architects of a distinctively modern style of interpretation that circumvents obvious or self-evident meanings in order to draw out less visible and less flattering truths (Ricoeur 356). Ricoeur’s term has sustained an energetic after-life within religious studies, as well as in philosophy, intellectual history, and related fields, yet it never really took hold in literary studies. Why has a field that has devoted so much of its intellectual energy to interrogating, subverting, and defamiliarising found so little use for Ricoeur’s phrase?
journal.media-culture.org.au