Utanloves a dada-hoz.
Osszehasonlitaskeppen, ezeket elo emberek irtak.
Felhivom a figyelmet arra a mondatra, ami azt hangsulyozza, milyen sokaig
gyakoroltak.
udv kgy
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We are pleased to announce winners of the fourth Bad Writing Contest,
sponsored by the scholarly journal Philosophy and Literature.
The Bad Writing Contest celebrates the most stylistically lamentable
passages found in scholarly books and articles published in
the last few years. Ordinary journalism, fiction, departmental memos, etc.
are not eligible, nor are parodies: entries must be
non-ironic, from serious, published academic journals or books. Deliberate
parody cannot be allowed in a field where unintended
self-parody is so widespread.
Two of the most popular and influential literary scholars in the U.S. are
among those who wrote winning entries in the latest
contest.
Judith Butler, a Guggenheim Fellowship-winning professor of rhetoric and
comparative literature at the University of California at
Berkeley, admired as perhaps "one of the ten smartest people on the planet,"
wrote the sentence that captured the contest's first
prize. Homi K. Bhabha, a leading voice in the fashionable academic field of
postcolonial studies, produced the second-prize
winner.
"As usual," commented Denis Dutton, editor of Philosophy and Literature,
"this year's winners were produced by well-known,
highly-paid experts who have no doubt labored for years to write like this.
That these scholars must know what they are doing is
indicated by the fact that the winning entries were all published by
distinguished presses and academic journals."
Professor Butler's first-prize sentence appears in "Further Reflections on
the Conversations of Our Time," an article in the
scholarly journal Diacritics (1997):
The move from a structuralist account in which capital is
understood to structure social relations in
relatively homologous ways to a view of hegemony in which
power relations are subject to repetition,
convergence, and rearticulation brought the question of
temporality into the thinking of structure, and
marked a shift from a form of Althusserian theory that takes
structural totalities as theoretical objects to
one in which the insights into the contingent possibility of
structure inaugurate a renewed conception of
hegemony as bound up with the contingent sites and strategies
of the rearticulation of power.
Dutton remarked that "it?s possibly the anxiety-inducing obscurity of such
writing that has led Professor Warren Hedges of
Southern Oregon University to praise Judith Butler as ?probably one of the
ten smartest people on the planet?."
This year?s second prize went to a sentence written by Homi K. Bhabha, a
professor of English at the University of Chicago. It
appears in The Location of Culture (Routledge, 1994):
If, for a while, the ruse of desire is calculable for the uses
of discipline soon the repetition of guilt,
justification, pseudo-scientific theories, superstition,
spurious authorities, and classifications can be seen
as the desperate effort to "normalize" formally the
disturbance of a discourse of splitting that violates the
rational, enlightened claims of its enunciatory modality.
This prize-winning entry was nominated by John D. Peters of the University
of Iowa, who describes it as "quite splendid:
enunciatory modality, indeed!"
Ed Lilley, an art historian at the University of Bristol in the U.K.,
supplied a sentence by Steven Z. Levine from an anthology
entitled Twelve Views of Manet?s "Bar" (Princeton University Press, 1996):
As my story is an august tale of fathers and sons, real and
imagined, the biography here will fitfully attend
to the putative traces in Manet?s work of "les noms du p�re,"
a Lacanian romance of the errant paternal
phallus ("Les Non-dupes errent"), a revised Freudian novella
of the inferential dynamic of paternity which
annihilates (and hence enculturates) through the deferred
introduction of the third term of insemination the
phenomenologically irreducible dyad of the mother and child.
Stewart Unwin of the National Library of Australia passed along this gem
from the Australasian Journal of American Studies
(December 1997). The author is Timothy W. Luke, and the article is entitled,
"Museum Pieces: Politics and Knowledge at the
American Museum of Natural History":
Natural history museums, like the American Museum, constitute
one decisive means for power to
de-privatize and re-publicize, if only ever so slightly, the
realms of death by putting dead remains into
public service as social tokens of collective life, rereading
dead fossils as chronicles of life's everlasting
quest for survival, and canonizing now dead individuals as
nomological emblems of still living collectives in
Nature and History. An anatomo-politics of human and non-human
bodies is sustained by accumulating and
classifying such necroliths in the museum's
observational/expositional performances.
The passage goes on to explain that museum fossils and artifacts are
"strange superconductive conduits, carrying the vital elan
of contemporary biopower." It?s demonstrated with helpful quotations from
Michel Foucault?s History of Sexuality.
Finally, a tour de force from a 1996 book published by the State University
of New York Press. It was located by M.J. Devaney,
an editor at the University of Nebraska Press. The author is D.G. Leahy,
writing in Foundation: Matter the Body Itself.
Total presence breaks on the univocal predication of the
exterior absolute the absolute existent (of that of which
it is not possible to univocally predicate an outside, while
the equivocal predication of the outside of the
absolute exterior is possible of that of which the reality so
predicated is not the reality, viz., of the dark/of
the self, the identity of which is not outside the absolute
identity of the outside, which is to say that the
equivocal predication of identity is possible of the
self-identity which is not identity, while identity is
univocally predicated of the limit to the darkness, of the
limit of the reality of the self). This is the real
exteriority of the absolute outside: the reality of the
absolutely unconditioned absolute outside univocally
predicated of the dark: the light univocally predicated of the
darkness: the shining of the light univocally
predicated of the limit of the darkness: actuality univocally
predicated of the other of self-identity:
existence univocally predicated of the absolutely
unconditioned other of the self. The precision of the
shining of the light breaking the dark is the other-identity
of the light. The precision of the absolutely
minimum transcendence of the dark is the light itself/the
absolutely unconditioned exteriority of existence
for the first time/the absolutely facial identity of
existence/the proportion of the new creation sans
depth/the light itself ex nihilo: the dark itself univocally
identified, i.e., not self-identity identity itself
equivocally, not the dark itself equivocally, in
"self-alienation," not "self-identity, itself in self-alienation"
"released" in and by "otherness," and "actual
other,"
"itself," not the abysmal inversion of the light, the
reality of the darkness equivocally, absolute identity
equivocally predicated of the self/selfhood equivocally
predicated of the dark (the reality of this darkness the
other-self-covering of identity which is the
identification person-self).
Dr. Devaney calls this book "absolutely, unequivocally incomprehensible."
While she has supplied further extended quotations to
prove her point, this seems to be enough.