Abstract
According to Antony Easthope ‘the empiricist tradition affirms (1) that the subject is coherent and autonomous, (2) that discourse is in principle transparent and (3) that the real can be experienced directly’. Explicating the first of these points in relation to English culture, he added:
As always in an epistemological scenario, subject and object are joined reciprocally, so that the English subject and the English real correspond to each other. In that the English real is simply autonomous, given, the English subject is similarly not constructed but always already merely there as the subject of or for knowledge/experience.1
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Notes
Antony Easthope, ‘How Good is Seamus Heaney?’, English, 46, 184 (1997), 22, 21.
Easthope, Poetry as Discourse (Methuen, London, 1983), 76.
Ian Gregson, Contemporary Poetry and Postmodernism: Dialogue and Estrangement (Macmillan, Basingstoke, 1996), 37.
Paul Gilroy, The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness (Verso, London, 1998), 5.
James Booth, Philip Larkin: The Poet’s Plight (Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2005), 98, 97.
Rudyard Kipling, The Works of Rudyard Kipling (Wordsworth, Ware, 1994), 282, 323.
Ernest Hemingway, In Our Time (Scribners, New York, 1996), 12.
Morrison, Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination (Picador, London and Basingstoke, 1993), 72.
Richard Dyer, White (Routledge, London, 1997), 46.
David Wheatley and Justin Quinn, eds, Metre, 10 (2001), 7.
Adeline Yen Mah, One Written Word is Worth a Thousand Pieces of Gold (Harper Perennial, London, 2004), xxvii.
Ninian Smart, The Religious Experience of Mankind (Collins, London and Glasgow, 1971), 233.
Arthur Waley, The Way and the Power: A Study of the Tao Te Ching and Its Place in Chinese Thought (George Allen & Unwin, London, 1934), 155.
Stephen T. Asma, Buddha for Beginners (Writers and Readers, New York and London, 1996), 70.
J. Douglas Porteous, ‘Nowhereman’, About Larkin, 8 (1999), 12–16.
John D. Barrow, The Book of Nothing (Cape, London, 2000), 237.
Thomas Nagel, ‘Much ado’, Times Literary Supplement, 7 May 2004, 3.
Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass (Macmillan, London, 1966), 230–1.
Mark Rowe, ‘Larkin’s “Aubade”’, Philosophy and Literature (Ashgate, Aldershot, 2004), 203.
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© 2008 John Osborne
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Osborne, J. (2008). Larkin and Identity. In: Larkin, Ideology and Critical Violence. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230598935_9
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