

The discipline of literary studies
pp. 37-64
in: Andrea Selleri, Philip Gaydon (eds), Literary studies and the philosophy of literature, Berlin, Springer, 2016Abstract
This chapter addresses the status of literary studies as an academic discipline, tracing its emergence as a field of study in nineteenth-century British culture and gauging to what extent the field can lay claim to being a discipline of knowledge. The chapter examines early ideals that the profession invoked to establish itself as a disciplinary matrix, including its values, the definition of its object of study, its conceptualisation of the relationship between the said object of study and its context, its methodisation of the ideals of taste, and critical judgement. The conclusion is that literary studies should rethink its relationship with cultural values and reconceptualise its status as "disciplined intellectual work' rather than as a discipline of knowledge.