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International Politics of Literary Theory: A Study of Western Theory as Doctrines and a Discipline

Lin Jinghua   

  1. the School of Advanced International and Area Studies
  • Online:2018-11-25 Published:2019-03-24
  • About author:Lin Jinghua, Ph.D., is a Yenching scholar at Capital Normal University, distinguished professor in the School of Advanced International and Area Studies, and research fellow of the Center for Russian Studies as a key research institute of humanities & social sciences in China at East China Normal University. His research focuses on Russian issues, Russian literary criticism and its relationship with European literary criticism, relationship between literary theory and international politics.
  • Supported by:
    This article is funded by the Major Project of National Social Sciences Foundation (14ZDB089).

Abstract: The event of the publication of René Wellek and Austin Warren's Theory of Literature (1949) signals that European literary criticism was transformed rapidly into literary theory by American scholars. To be more specific, from then on, British New Criticism that emphasized close reading was replaced by American New Criticism that valorized analysis of semantic structure, and Russian formalism was rediscovered and reactivated in this process. Afterwards, more theoretical schools sprang up, such as semiotics, structuralism, hermeneutics, post-structuralism, deconstructionism, and so on. And along with the scientific literary theory, many other theories, like Western Marxist criticism, feminism, gender studies, new historicism, postcolonial criticism, and cultural studies in European and American academia, came out and flourished during the Cold War. At that time, the Soviet Union had established and reinforced a set of Communist theory. And in response to its reflection theory, U.S.-led "Western countries" turned "literary criticism" based on critics' individual experience into "literary theory" as a discipline with a curriculum system. Therefore, the discipline of literary theory, whose blossom was a result of the Cold War, and specific literary theory, unaffiliated with ideology of the war, were constantly in conflict with each other. And there was much controversy about literary criticism during the Cold War. But as the war ended with the upheaval of Eastern Europe and collapse of the Soviet Union, the theory of reflection failed, and Western literary theory, like "the end of history" theory, finally became legitimate in the process of globalization. It is a major concern for western theorists to develop the disputed theory in recent 40 years, but post-theories' dimension of international politics could not be ignored.

Key words: western literary theory, the Cold War, academic system, politics, international politics