Stanley E. Fish
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Stanley Eugene Fish (born April 19, 1938) is an American literary theorist, legal scholar, author and public intellectual. He is currently the Floersheimer Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law at Yeshiva University's
Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law The Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law is the law school of Yeshiva University. Located in New York City and founded in 1976, the school is named for Supreme Court Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo. Cardozo graduated its first class in 1979. An LL.M. p ...
in New York City, although Fish has no degrees or training in law. Fish has previously served as the Davidson-Kahn Distinguished University Professor of Humanities and a professor of law at Florida International University and is dean emeritus of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Fish is associated with
postmodernism Postmodernism is an intellectual stance or Rhetorical modes, mode of discourseNuyen, A.T., 1992. The Role of Rhetorical Devices in Postmodernist Discourse. Philosophy & Rhetoric, pp.183–194. characterized by philosophical skepticism, skepticis ...
, although he views himself instead as an advocate of
anti-foundationalism Anti-foundationalism (also called nonfoundationalism) is any philosophy which rejects a foundationalist approach. An anti-foundationalist is one who does not believe that there is some fundamental belief or principle which is the basic ground or f ...
. He is also viewed as having influenced the rise and development of
reader-response theory Reader-response criticism is a school of literary theory that focuses on the reader (or "audience") and their experience of a literary work, in contrast to other schools and theories that focus attention primarily on the author or the content and f ...
. During his career he has also taught at the
Cardozo School of Law The Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law is the law school of Yeshiva University. Located in New York City and founded in 1976, the school is named for Supreme Court Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo. Cardozo graduated its first class in 1979. An LL.M. ...
, University of California, Berkeley, Johns Hopkins University, The University of Pennsylvania, Yale Law School, Columbia University,
The John Marshall Law School University of Illinois Chicago School of Law is a public law school in Chicago, Illinois. Founded in 1899, the school offers programs for both part-time and full-time students, with both day and night classes available, and offers January enroll ...
, and
Duke University Duke University is a private research university in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present-day city of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco and electric power industrialist James ...
.


Early life

Fish was born in Providence, Rhode Island. He was raised Jewish. His father, an immigrant from Poland, was a plumber and contractor who made it a priority for his son to get a university education. Fish became the first member of his family to attend college in the US, earning a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1959 and an M.A. from Yale University in 1960. He completed his Ph.D. in 1962, also at Yale University.


Academic career

Fish taught English at the University of California at Berkeley and Johns Hopkins University before serving as Arts and Sciences Professor of English and professor of law at
Duke University Duke University is a private research university in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present-day city of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco and electric power industrialist James ...
from 1986 to 1998. From 1999 to 2004, he was dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and he served as distinguished visiting professor at the John Marshall Law School from 2000 until 2002. Fish also held joint appointments in the Departments of Political Science and Criminal Justice and was the chairman of the Religious Studies Committee. During his tenure there, he recruited professors respected in the academic community, and attracted attention to the college. After resigning as dean in a high-level dispute with the state of Illinois over funding UIC, Fish spent a year teaching in the Department of English. The Institute for the Humanities at UIC named a lecture series in his honor, which is still ongoing. In June 2005, he accepted the position of Davidson-Kahn Distinguished University Professor of Humanities and Law at Florida International University, teaching in the
FIU College of Law The Florida International University College of Law is the law school of Florida International University, located in Miami, Florida in the United States. The law school is accredited by the American Bar Association, and is the only public law sch ...
. In November 2010 he joined the board of visitors of
Ralston College Ralston College is an institution of higher education that offers in-person degree programs as well as online programs. It began its first in-person offering, an MA in the Humanities, in autumn of 2022 with the authority to grant degrees. Its first ...
, a start-up institution in Savannah, Georgia. He has also been a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences since 1985.


Milton

Fish started his career as a medievalist. His first book, published by Yale University Press in 1965, was on the late-medieval/early-Renaissance poet
John Skelton John Skelton may refer to: *John Skelton (poet) (c.1460–1529), English poet. * John de Skelton, MP for Cumberland (UK Parliament constituency) *John Skelton (died 1439), MP for Cumberland (UK Parliament constituency) *John Skelton (American footb ...
. Fish explains in his partly biographical essay, "
Milton Milton may refer to: Names * Milton (surname), a surname (and list of people with that surname) ** John Milton (1608–1674), English poet * Milton (given name) ** Milton Friedman (1912–2006), Nobel laureate in Economics, author of '' Free t ...
, Thou Shouldst be Living at this Hour" (published in ''There's No Such Thing as Free Speech . . . And It's a Good Thing, Too''), that he came to Milton by accident. In 1963, the same year that Fish started as an assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley its resident Miltonist, Constantinos A. Patrides, received a grant. The chair of the department asked Fish to teach the Milton course, notwithstanding the fact that the young professor "had never — either as an undergraduate or in graduate school — taken a Milton course" (269). The eventual result was ''Surprised by Sin: The Reader in Paradise Lost'' (1967; rpt. 1997). Fish's 2001 book, ''How Milton Works'', reflects five decades' worth of his scholarship on Milton.


Interpretive communities

Fish is best known for his analysis of
interpretive communities Interpretive communities are a theoretical concept stemming from reader-response criticism and publicized by Stanley Fish Stanley Eugene Fish (born April 19, 1938) is an American literary theorist, legal scholar, author and public intellectual ...
— an offshoot of reader-response criticism. His work in this field examines how the interpretation of a text is dependent upon each reader's own subjective experience in one or more communities, each of which is defined as a 'community' by a distinct epistemology. For Fish, a large part of what renders a reader's subjective experience valuable — that is, why it may be considered "constrained" as opposed to an uncontrolled and idiosyncratic assertion of the self — comes from a concept native to the field of linguistics called linguistic competence. In Fish's source the term is explained as "the idea that it is possible to characterize a linguistic system that every speaker shares." In the context of literary criticism, he uses this concept to argue that a reader's approach to a text is not completely subjective, and that an internalized understanding of language shared by the native speakers of that given language makes possible the creation of normative boundaries for one's experience with language.


Fish and university politics

Fish has written extensively on the politics of the university, having taken positions supporting campus
speech code A speech code is any rule or regulation that limits, restricts, or bans speech beyond the strict legal limitations upon freedom of speech or press found in the legal definitions of harassment, slander, libel, and fighting words. Such codes are c ...
s and criticizing political statements by universities or faculty bodies on matters outside their professional areas of expertise. He argued in January 2008 on his ''New York Times''-syndicated blog that the humanities are of no
instrumental value In moral philosophy, instrumental and intrinsic value are the distinction between what is a ''means to an end'' and what is as an ''end in itself''. Things are deemed to have instrumental value if they help one achieve a particular end; intrinsic ...
, but have only intrinsic worth. He explains, "To the question 'of what use are the humanities?', the only honest answer is none whatsoever. And it is an answer that brings honor to its subject. Justification, after all, confers value on an activity from a perspective outside its performance. An activity that cannot be justified is an activity that refuses to regard itself as instrumental to some larger good. The humanities are their own good. There is nothing more to say, and anything that is said diminishes the object of its supposed praise." Fish has lectured across the US at many universities and colleges including Florida Atlantic University,
Brown University Brown University is a private research university in Providence, Rhode Island. Brown is the seventh-oldest institution of higher education in the United States, founded in 1764 as the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providenc ...
, the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard University, University of Toronto, Columbia University, the University of Vermont, the University of Georgia, the University of Louisville, San Diego State University, the University of Kentucky, Bates College, the University of Central Florida, the University of West Florida, and the
Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law The Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law is the law school of Yeshiva University. Located in New York City and founded in 1976, the school is named for Supreme Court Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo. Cardozo graduated its first class in 1979. An LL.M. p ...
.


Fish as university politician

As chair of the Duke English department from 1986 to 1992, Fish attracted attention and controversy. Fish, according to ''
Lingua Franca A lingua franca (; ; for plurals see ), also known as a bridge language, common language, trade language, auxiliary language, vehicular language, or link language, is a language systematically used to make communication possible between groups ...
,'' used "shameless—and in academe unheard-of—entrepreneurial gusto" to take "a respectable but staid Southern English department and transform it into the professional powerhouse of the day", in part through the payment of lavish salaries. His time at Duke saw comparatively quite light undergraduate and graduate coursework requirements for students, matched by their heavy graduate teaching requirements. This permitted professors to reduce their own teaching. In April 1992, near the end of Fish's time as department chair, an external review committee considered evidence that the English curriculum had become "a hodgepodge of uncoordinated offerings", lacking in "broad foundational courses" or faculty planning. The department's dissipating prominence in the 1990s was featured on the front page of '' The New York Times''.


Criticisms of his work

As a frequent contributor to '' The New York Times'' and '' The Wall Street Journal'' editorial page, Fish has been the target of wide-ranging criticism. Writing in ''
Slate Slate is a fine-grained, foliated, homogeneous metamorphic rock derived from an original shale-type sedimentary rock composed of clay or volcanic ash through low-grade regional metamorphism. It is the finest grained foliated metamorphic rock. ...
'' magazine, Judith Shulevitz reported that not only does Fish openly proclaim himself "unprincipled" but also rejects wholesale the concepts of "fairness, impartiality, reasonableness." To Fish, "ideas have no consequences." For taking this stance, Shulevitz characterizes Fish as "not the unprincipled relativist he's accused of being. He's something worse. He's a fatalist." Likewise, among academics, Fish has endured vigorous criticism. The conservative
R. V. Young Robert V. Young, Jr. (born 1947) is a professor of Renaissance Literature and Literary Criticism in the English Department of North Carolina State University, co-founder and co-editor (with M. Thomas Hester) of the ''John Donne Journal'', and au ...
writes, Terry Eagleton, a prominent British Marxist, excoriates Fish's "discreditable epistemology" as "sinister". According to Eagleton, "Like almost all diatribes against universalism, Fish's critique of universalism has its own rigid universals: the priority at all times and places of sectoral interests, the permanence of conflict, the a priori status of belief systems, the rhetorical character of truth, the fact that all apparent openness is secretly closure, and the like." Of Fish's attempt to co-opt the critiques leveled against him, Eagleton responds, "The felicitous upshot is that nobody can ever criticise Fish, since if their criticisms are intelligible to him, they belong to his cultural game and are thus not really criticisms at all; and if they are not intelligible, they belong to some other set of conventions entirely and are therefore irrelevant." In the essay "Sophistry about Conventions", philosopher
Martha Nussbaum Martha Craven Nussbaum (; born May 6, 1947) is an American philosopher and the current Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago, where she is jointly appointed in the law school and the philosoph ...
argues that Fish's theoretical views are based on "extreme relativism and even radical subjectivism." Discounting his work as nothing more than
sophistry A sophist ( el, σοφιστής, sophistes) was a teacher in ancient Greece in the fifth and fourth centuries BC. Sophists specialized in one or more subject areas, such as philosophy, rhetoric, music, athletics, and mathematics. They taught ' ...
, Nussbaum claims that Fish "relies on the regulative principle of non-contradiction in order to adjudicate between competing principles", thereby relying on normative standards of argumentation even as he argues against them. Offering an alternative, Nussbaum cites John Rawls's work in ''
A Theory of Justice ''A Theory of Justice'' is a 1971 work of political philosophy and ethics by the philosopher John Rawls (1921-2002) in which the author attempts to provide a moral theory alternative to utilitarianism and that addresses the problem of distributiv ...
'' to highlight "an example of a rational argument; it can be said to yield, in a perfectly recognizable sense, ethical truth." Nussbaum appropriates Rawls's critique of the insufficiencies of Utilitarianism, showing that a rational person will consistently prefer a system of justice that acknowledges boundaries between separate persons rather than relying on the aggregation of the sum total of desires. "This", she claims, "is altogether different from rhetorical manipulation." Camille Paglia, author of ''
Sexual Personae ''Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson'' is a 1990 work about sexual decadence in Western literature and the visual arts by scholar Camille Paglia, in which she addresses major artists and writers such as Donatell ...
'' and public intellectual, denounced Fish as a "totalitarian Tinkerbell," charging him with hypocrisy for lecturing about multiculturalism from the perspective of a tenured professor at the homogeneous and sheltered ivory tower of Duke. David Hirsch, a critic of post-structuralist influences on hermeneutics, censured Fish for "lapses in logical rigor" and "carelessness toward rhetorical precision." In an examination of Fish's arguments, Hirsch attempts to demonstrate that "not only was a restoration of New Critical methods unnecessary, but that Fish himself had not managed to rid himself of the shackles of New Critical theory." Hirsch compares Fish's work to Penelope's loom in the '' Odyssey'', stating, "what one critic weaves by day, another unweaves by night." "Nor," he writes, "does this weaving and unweaving constitute a dialectic, since no forward movement takes place." Ultimately, Hirsch sees Fish as left to "wander in his own Elysian fields, hopelessly alienated from art, from truth, and from humanity."


Personal life

He is married to literary critic Jane Tompkins."Former dean at UIC to leave"
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Awards

Fish received the
PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay The PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay is awarded by the PEN America (formerly PEN American Center) to an author for a book of original collected essays. The award was founded by PEN Member and author Barbaralee Diamonstein an ...
in 1994 for ''There's No Such Thing As Free Speech, and it's a Good Thing, Too.''


Bibliography


Primary works by Fish

*''John Skelton's Poetry''. New Haven, CT: Yale UP, 1965. *''Surprised by Sin: The Reader in'' Paradise Lost. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1967. (10). (13). * ''
Self-Consuming Artifacts ''Self-Consuming Artifacts: The Experience of Seventeenth-Century Literature'' (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972, ) is book of literary criticism by American literary critic Stanley Fish. In it, Fish examines various English writers ...
: The Experience of Seventeenth-Century Literature''. Berkeley, CA: U of California P, 1972. *"Interpreting the Variorum." ''
Critical Inquiry ''Critical Inquiry'' is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal in the humanities published by the University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Department of English Language and Literature (University of Chicago). While the topics and historica ...
'' (1976). *"Why We Can't All Just Get Along." '' First Things'' (1996). *''The Living Temple: George Herbert and Catechizing''. Berkeley, CA: U of California P, 1978. *''Is There a Text in This Class? The Authority of Interpretive Communities''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1980. (10). (13). *''Doing What Comes Naturally: Change, Rhetoric, and the Practice of Theory in Literary and Legal Studies''. Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1989. *''Professional Correctness: Literary Studies and Political Change''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard U P, 1999. *''The Trouble with Principle''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1999. *''How Milton Works''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2001.
''Save The World on Your Own Time''
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.

Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010. *''How to Write a Sentence: And How to Read One''. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers, 2011. *Versions of Antihumanism: Milton and Others. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.
''Versions of Academic Freedom: From Professionalism to Revolution''
Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2014. . *''Winning Arguments: What Works and Doesn't Work in Politics, the Bedroom, the Courtroom, and the Classroom''. New York, NY: HarperCollins, 2016. . *''The First: How to Think About Hate Speech, Campus Speech, Religious Speech, Fake News, Post-Truth, and Donald Trump.'' Atria/One Signal Publishers. 2019 .


Collections of works by Fish

*''There's No Such Thing As Free Speech, and it's a Good Thing, Too''. New York: Oxford UP, 1994. :The title essay and an additional essay, "Jerry Falwell's Mother," focus on free speech issues. In the latter piece, Fish argues that, if one has some answer in mind to the question "what is free speech good for?" along the lines of "in the free and open clash of viewpoints the truth can more readily be known," then it makes no sense to defend deliberate malicious libel (such as that which was at issue in the U.S. Supreme Court case of ''
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell ''Hustler Magazine, Inc. v. Falwell'', 485 U.S. 46 (1988), was a landmark decision of the United States Supreme Court ruling that the First and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit public figures from recovering damages for the tort of intentional infli ...
'') in the name of "free speech." *''The Stanley Fish Reader''. Ed. H. Aram Veeser. London: Blackwell Publishers, 1999. *''Think Again: Contrarian Reflections on Life, Culture, Politics, Religion, Law, and Education'', Princeton, (2015),


See also

* Formalism *
New Criticism New Criticism was a formalist movement in literary theory that dominated American literary criticism in the middle decades of the 20th century. It emphasized close reading, particularly of poetry, to discover how a work of literature functioned as ...


Notes and references


Further reading

*Robertson, Michael. ''Stanley Fish on Philosophy, Politics and Law''. Cambridge University Press, 2014 *Olson, Gary A.
Stanley Fish, America's Enfant Terrible: The Authorized Biography.
' Carbondale: SIU P, 2016. *Olson, Gary A. '' Justifying Belief: Stanley Fish and the Work of Rhetoric''. Albany: SUNY P, 2002. *''Postmodern Sophistry: Stanley Fish and the Critical Enterprise''. Ed. Gary Olson and Lynn Worsham. Albany, NY: SUNY P, 2004. *Owen, J. Judd. ''Religion and the Demise of Liberal Rationalism''. Chapters 6–8 and "Appendix: A Reply to Stanley Fish." University of Chicago Press, 2001. *Perez-Firmat, Gustavo: “Interpretive Assumptions and Interpreted Texts: On a Poem by Stanley Fish,” Essays in Literature, 11 (1984), 145–52. *Lang, Chris "The Reader-Response Theory of Stanley Fis

*Landa, José Ángel García "Stanley E. Fish's Speech Act

*Pierre Schlag, "Fish v. Zapp--The Case of the Relatively Autonomous Self," 76 Georgetown Law Journal 37 (1988)


External links


Interview with Stanley Fish
published in
The minnesota review
' March 3, 2000. Accessed December 23, 2006.

Press release. Florida International University. June 29, 2005.
Stanley Fish
article published in the ''Johns Hopkins University Guide to Literary Theory & Criticism''.

Florida International University Law School faculty biography.
Stanley Fish's blog
at '' The New York Times'' Editorial section.
Stanley Fish on Deconstruction
Radio interview with program host, Hugh LaFollette. WETS-FM. University of San Francisco. n.d. (Audio link.)
WorldCat Identities page for Stanley Eugene Fish
* ;Archival collections
Guide to the Stanley Fish Papers.
Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California {{DEFAULTSORT:Fish, Stanley 1938 births American academics of English literature American people of Polish-Jewish descent American literary critics American rhetoricians Duke University faculty Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Florida International University faculty Johns Hopkins University faculty Literary critics of English Living people PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award winners Writers from Providence, Rhode Island University of California, Berkeley faculty University of Illinois Chicago faculty University of Pennsylvania alumni Yale University alumni Florida International University College of Law faculty