Anti-essentialism
Anti-foundationalists use logical or historical or genealogical attacks on foundational concepts (see especially Nietzsche andTotalisation and legitimation
Anti-foundationalists oppose totalising visions of social, scientific or historical reality, considering them to lack legitimation, and preferring local narratives instead. No social totality but a multitude of local and concrete practices; "not ''a'' history but at best histories". In such neopragmatism, there is no overall truth, merely an ongoing process of better and more fruitful methods of edification. Even our most taken-for-granted categories for social analysis—of gender, sex, race, and class—are considered by anti-essentialists like Marjorie Garber asHope and fear
Stanley Fish distinguishes between what he calls "antifoundationalist theory hope" and "antifoundationalist theory fear"—finding them however both equally illusory. Fear of the corrosive effects of antifoundationalism was widespread in the late twentieth century, anticipating such things as a cultural meltdown and moral anarchy, or (at the least) a loss of the necessary critical distance to allow for leverage against the status quo. For Fish, however, the threat of a loss of objective standards of rational enquiry with the disappearance of any founding principle was a false fear: far from opening the way to an unbridled subjectivity, antifoundationalism leaves the individual firmly entrenched within the conventional context and standards of enquiry/dispute of the discipline/profession/habitus within which s/he is irrevocably placed. By the same token, however, the antifoundationalist ''hope'' of escaping local situations through awareness of the contingency of all such situations—through recognition of the conventional/rhetorical nature of all claims to master principles—that hope is to Fish equally foredoomed by the very nature of the situational consciousness, the all-embracing social and intellectual context, in which every individual is separately enclosed. Fish has also noted how, in contradistinction to hopes of an emancipatory outcome from antifoundationalism, anti-essentialist theories arguing for the absence of a transcontextual point of reference have been put to conservative and neo-conservative, as well as progressive, ends. Thus, for example,Criticism
Anti-foundationalists have been criticised for attacking all general claims ''except'' their own; for offering a localizing rhetoric contradicted in practice by their own globalizing style. Edward Said condemned radical anti-foundationalism for excessive cultural relativism and overdependence on the linguistic turn at the expense of human realities.Tony Judt, ''Reappraisals'' (2008) p. 164 Wittgenstein attacked anti-foundationalism in his book '' On Certainty'': "If you tried to doubt everything you would not get as far as doubting anything. The game of doubting itself presupposes certainty."Anti-foundationalists
See also
References
Further reading
* Katherine N. Hayles, ''Chaos Bound'' (1990) * W. J. T. Mitchell, ''Against Theory'' (1985) * Richard Rorty, ''Consequences of Pragmatism'' (1982) * Edward Said, ''Humanism and Democratic Criticism'' (2004)External links