Synopses & Reviews
Harry Berger, Jr., has long been one of our most revered and respected literary and cultural critics. Since the late nineties, a stream of remarkable and innovative publications have shown how very broad his interests are, moving from Shakespeare to baroque painting, to Plato, to theories of early culture.In this volume a distinguished group of scholars gathers to celebrate the work of Harry Berger, Jr. To celebrate,in Berger's words, is to visit something either in great numbers or else frequently-to go away and come back, go away and come back, go away and come back. Celebrating is what you do the second or third time around, but not the first. To celebrate is to revisit. To revisit is to revise. Celebration is the eureka of revision.Not only former students but distinguished colleagues and scholars come together in these pages to discover Berger's eurekas-to revisit the rigor and originality of his criticism, and occasionally to revise its conclusions, all through the joy of strenuous engagement. Nineteen essays on Berger's Shakespeare, his Spenser, his Plato, and his Rembrandt, on his theories of interpretation and cultural change and on the ethos of his critical and pedagogical styles, open new approaches to the astonishing ongoing body of work authored by Berger. An introduction by the editors and an afterword by Berger himself place this festival of interpretation in the context of Berger's intellectual development and the reception of his work from the mid-twentieth century into the first decade of the twenty-first.
Review
. . .Acknowledging the extraordinary, multidimensional work of Harry Berger Jr., and consists of a lively set of celebratory contemplations (more talks than essays) on his scholarly career.
The sections on theory and academic community, in particular, raise questions about the conduct of the profession itself, and this emphasis probably makes the book most useful to those who are interested in reassessing the place of these disciplines in the university and trying to discern future directions for humanistic research.-C.S. Vilmar
Very few members of any profession have bestowed a touch more rare. . . Renaissance studies has been lucky to benefit from the precedents of this master mapmaker. -Wililam J. Kennedy
"It is extraordinary language that is Berger's singular forte, what Wittgenstein might have classified as 'language on holiday.'" -Shakespeare Quarterly
About the Author
NINA LEVINE is Associate Professor of English at the University of South Carolina.
DAVID LEE MILLER is Carolina Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of South Carolina.