Conversations 7

Conversations 7

Conversations 7 THE JOURNAL OF CAVELLIAN STUDIES CONVERSATIONS 7 Conversations: The Journal of Cavellian Studies 7 Date June 2019 - September 2020 Editor David LaRocca (Cornell University) Contributors Steven G. Affeldt (Le Moyne College) Isabel Andrade (Yachay Wasi) Stephanie Brown (Williams College) Alice Crary (University of Oxford/The New School) Byron Davies (National Autonomous University of Mexico) Thomas Dumm (Amherst College) Richard Eldridge (Swarthmore College) Yves Erard (University of Lausanne) Eli Friedlander (Tel Aviv University) Alonso Gamarra (McGill University) Paul Grimstad (Columbia University) Arata Hamawaki (Auburn University) Louisa Kania (Williams College) Nelly Lin-Schweitzer (Williams College) Richard Moran (Harvard University) Sianne Ngai (Stanford University) Bernie Rhie (Williams College) Lawrence Rhu (University of South Carolina) Eric Ritter (Vanderbilt University) William Rothman (University of Miami) Naoko Saito (Kyoto University) Don Selby (College of Staten Island, The City University of New York) P. Adams Sitney (Princeton University) Abraham D. Stone (University of California, Santa Cruz) Nicholas F. Stang (University of Toronto) Lindsay Waters (Harvard University Press) Kay Young (University of California, Santa Barbara) CONVERSATIONS 7 Managing Editors Sérgio Dias Branco (University of Coimbra): [email protected] Amir Khan (Dalian Maritime University): [email protected] Advisory Board Sarah Beckwith (Duke University) Peter Dula (Eastern Mennonite University) Richard Eldridge (Swarthmore College) Adam Gonya (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven) Larry Jackson (The New School) Andrew Klevan (University of Oxford) Stephen Mulhall (University of Oxford) Sianne Ngai (Stanford University) Andrew Norris (University of California, Santa Barbara) Lawrence Rhu (University of South Carolina) D. N. Rodowick (University of Chicago) Miguel Tamen (University of Lisbon) Publisher uOttawa Open Access Morisset Hall 65 University Private Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5 Canada ISSN 1929-6169 Website https://uottawa.scholarsportal.info/ojs/index.php/conversations/index CONVERSATIONS 7 Table of Contents Introduction: Acknowledging Stanley Cavell 1 EDITORIAL COMMENT (DAVID LaROCCA) 1. Apologies to Stanley Cavell 8 P. ADAMS SITNEY 2. Cavell as a Way Into Philosophy 14 RICHARD MORAN 3. In Pursuit of Pursuits of Happiness 20 WILLIAM ROTHMAN 4. Encountering Stanley Cavell 38 RICHARD ELDRIDGE 5. Stanley Cavell, Philosopher Untamed 43 LINDSAY WATERS 6. For My Teacher, Stanley Cavell 46 ALICE CRARY 7. Stanley Cavell, with Time 51 ELI FRIEDLANDER 8. Continuing Education with Stanley Cavell 57 NAOKO SAITO CONVERSATIONS 7 9. At the Feet of the Familiar: Thoughts on Cavell on Emerson and Wittgenstein 63 STEVEN G. AFFELDT 10. Cavell as Mentor 79 SIANNE NGAI 11. “Stay on Your Path, Young Man” 84 PAUL GRIMSTAD 12. Remembering Stanley Cavell 88 BYRON DAVIES 13. Listening to Cavell 92 KAY YOUNG 14. Stanley Cavell at Amherst College 102 THOMAS DUMM 15. In Memoriam: Stanley Cavell 106 ABRAHAM D. STONE 16. Cavell’s Importance for Philosophical Aesthetics 110 NICHOLAS F. STANG 17. Undoing the Psychologizing of the Psychological 114 ARATA HAMAWAKI 18. Thinking (America) After Cavell: On Learning and Becoming Different 119 ALONSO GAMARRA 19. Thinking with Cavell about (His) Death 145 ERIC RITTER CONVERSATIONS 7 20. Form of Life, Buddhism, and Human Rights 154 DON SELBY 21. The Child’s Claim to the Transmission of Language 172 YVES ERARD 22. Encountering Cavell in the College Classroom 183 ISABEL ANDRADE STEPHANIE BROWN LOUISA KANIA NELLY LIN-SCHWEITZER BERNIE RHIE 23. Other Minds and a Mind of One’s Own: An Essay on Poetry and Philosophy 194 LAWRENCE F. RHU 24. Selections from Preowned Odysseys and Rented Rooms 226 LAWRENCE F. RHU 25. Acknowledgments: Thinking of and Thanking Stanley Cavell 248 DAVID LaROCCA Contributors 268 CONVERSATIONS 7 Introduction: Acknowledging Stanley Cavell EDITORIAL COMMENT A year has elapsed since Stanley Cavell died, and in that time those who knew him and read his work, have been coming to terms with his permanent departure. For many it has not been easy, and part of this difficulty includes trying to say something in writing about what the loss has meant, or might entail, or perhaps better, what it stirs in us. Shortly after Cavell’s death, I was in conversation with the editors of this jour- nal, and we were all thinking similar thoughts, namely, that a commemorative issue was in order. The editors graciously invited me to guest edit, and accepting the honor, I turned in kind to the community of Cavell’s readers—his friends, colleagues, admi- rers, and others beyond the immediate circle—to solicit reflections. The idea, a fami- liar one for those inclined to commemorate the loss of a beloved, esteemed writer and thinker by offering further words, was to invite a small, representative, and willing group to share remarks in the wake of Stanley Cavell’s death—that is, with an eye toward how his work lives on, and how he and his work have given us life. The pre- sent collection of dispatches is the result. There are, and have been, several similar initiatives afoot, and I believe, I hope, the benefactions here assembled are a fitting complement to those efforts.1 As we have individually and collectively been processing what it is like to inhabit a world lived without Cavell—without his peerless company, without his unmatched philosophical aid and insight—we are all now, no doubt, thrown back upon his works, his words (a pleasure, to be sure) but also turned to them this time with memories of our earlier encounters of reading, and in some cases, in many cases also encounters with the man himself. Perhaps it is not surprising then, that the tone of many of these 1. Other commemorative projects include: ASAP journal, http://asapjournal.com/tag/stanley-cavell; Forma de Vida, https://formadevida.org/?fbclid=IwAR3aW-ziPY1RGP7idwIZwyEHjV4GlO4XeQtIsXe- BmnIOHdkPmzglZUun-ds#scfdv15; and the London Review of Books editors’ blog, https://www.lrb.- co.uk/blog/2018/06/20/the-editors/stanley-cavell. CONVERSATIONS 7 2 pieces might be taken up as variations on the genre known as Acknowledgments—so often arriving in the algorithm, “I wish to thank x for doing y and inspiring z.” The con- ceptual affiliation with Cavell’s master-word acknowledgment is palpably evident, and I hope to say something about the significance of that connection. But first, I don’t mean to suggest that the pieces for this special issue were conceived in the spirit of Acknowledgments, nor was my prompt to contributors framed along such lines, and yet, and yet, commemoration—“remembering together”—seems to have allowed for and encouraged a space of thinking and thanking (re-thinking, re-membering, re-re- membering, that is, re-cognizing coupled with the gesture of appreciative recognition) that feels kin to the kinds of things one wants, tries, to say in Acknowledgments. In this prefatory note, I am just putting a little more pressure on this resonance partly because I have long been fascinated—in Cavell’s own work—with the particular tone, registrati- on, detail, cadence, and duration of his many, many (formal, published) Acknowledg- ments ... and Prefaces, Forewords, Afterwords, and allied occasional pieces that functi- oned in a similar vein (e.g., “Words of Welcome”).2 What I did say to the contributors was inspired by a conversation I had with Cavell in the months when he was just beginning to compose the autobiographical remarks that would become Little Did I Know: Excerpts from Memory. As Cavell re- flected on his method for writing this work, he said: “I’m seeking those moments from my life that rise to the level of philosophical significance.” Such a rich observati- on can turn us anew to Little Did I Know, and give us a fresh point of reference on how, say, a personal memory finds its way into the conversation of philosophy—and now, in Cavell’s case, a permanent home in the history of philosophy. For our purpo- ses here, though, since we are all readers of Cavell’s work, we all have our own memo- ries and moments to draw from; our first question will be to discern what of those thoughts and recollections we might wish to share with others, which may be worth sharing (by what criterion?)—rising to the level of philosophical significance. The dis- cernment is not easy in easier circumstances; it is that much more trying in a state of mourning. 2. Cavell, “Words of Welcome,” in Beyond Document: Essays on Nonfiction Film, ed. Charles Warren (Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 1996), xi-xxviii. CONVERSATIONS 7 3 Thinking over Cavell’s remark, and as I tried to understand the method it con- veyed, in so far as such a thing is possible from a single statement (yet, later, it would be triumphantly glossed in the pages that form Little Did I Know), I suggested to the prospective contributor to this special issue of Conversations that she feel free to adapt the following strands of “approach” to her piece—deciding, as she preferred, to make them distinctive, or as a braid or weave. The nature of how each strand might be gathered, and how it could be related to other strands, remained an open question, and at that, one for experimentation and exploration. (I did also welcome other forms of prose, such as correspondence, journal entries, poems; and solicited ideas that might not be captured by familiar categories of type and genre). So, a few words to define or refine a first “approach,” or strand of thinking: I imagined that a contributor might select a passage, or passages, from the breadth of Cavell’s writing that taught her something formally and conceptually. I inquired: how did this piece or passage tutor you—that is, by way of Cavell’s distinctive literary-phi- losophical voice—for instance, to think for the first time, or anew, about some crucial element worthy of philosophical discernment? And then another approach might be drawn in: If you knew Cavell personally—were in his classes or among those he men- tored; if you collaborated with him, or shared his company in some other capacity— please do integrate reminiscences that are pertinent to your thinking out of these re- flections.

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