Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociology, Donovan's Road, University College Cork, Republic of Ireland,
Abstract
This article considers `critique' as performative, being on the one hand a reiterative performance, that enacts the `critic' through the act of critique, and on the other hand reflecting the constitution of the subject. While this approach takes on the conceptual framework of Judith Butler's work, it differs by refusing critique — or its correlates; parody, subversion or similar — any special status. Like any other performance critique is taken here as a cultural practice, as a Foucauldian `technique of self', though the complex genealogy of such a technique lies outside the scope of this article. In order to illustrate this argument I interpret a number of Butler's prefaces, interviews and digressions which diverge from her own theoretical framework, and argue that these `fictions' arise from critical `disavowals': that is, a `self-transformative' turn against power. The subjective `crisis' that prompts critique is then elaborated by comparison to Girard's work on imitation and sacrifice.
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,History
Reference41 articles.
1. Cultural Pragmatics: Social Performance between Ritual and Strategy
2. The New Spirit of Capitalism
3. Butler, J. (1982) `Lesbian S & M — The Politics of Dis-illusion ', in R. Linden et al. (eds) Against Sadomasochism: A Radical Feminist Analysis. San Francisco, CA: Frog in the Well, pp. 168—75.
4. Butler, J. (1996) `Gender as Performance', in P. Osborne (ed.) A Critical Sense: Interviews with Intellectuals . London: Routledge, pp. 109—26.
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