In Another Life
The Decline and Fall of the Humanities through the Eyes of an Ivy-League Jew
by
Book Details
About the Book
In 1966, a young Ph.D. fresh from Harvard came down to New Haven to take up a teaching position in the Yale English department, then widely viewed as the best in the world. In Another Life focuses in lucid retrospect on that time, place, and career, and on that moment within it which would define his destiny. Would he succeed, through native wit, hard work, intense ambition, and sheer good luck, in rising through the ranks, pleasing senior colleagues, weathering the shifting winds of critical doctrine and storms of institutional politics, to achieve that most glittering, coveted, and rarely conferred of prizes: tenure at Yale? A campus novel, full of eccentric characters and bizarre twists and turns? Well, like his quest for tenure, it’s a case of yes and no. For all this actually happened. Yet it’s more than a personal memoir. In Another Life reflects—and reflects on—the so-called ‘crisis in English’ at a time when new doctrines—‘structuralism,’ ‘deconstruction,’ ‘theory’—were bending literary studies into unaccustomed postures, particularly at Yale. But it also reflects the powerful forces at work on higher education from the wider world outside: the political and economic pressures that were transforming an older ‘elitist’ culture, with literature and the humanities at its core, into the more ‘egalitarian’ society—economistic, technological, and bureaucratic—that we all now inhabit. The author, a self-proclaimed ‘meritocrat,’ finds himself deeply at odds with both worlds, and without succour or support from either as he staggers between them. But what a good read it is for those prepared to entertain the issues it raises! Trenchantly observed and written, this is the story of one man’s effort to work out his separate peace with an institution he finds increasingly alienating and absurd. Its style alone will make any but the most politically correct of readers smile through her tears!
About the Author
Howard Felperin has published several books on Shakespeare and literary theory, including Beyond Deconstruction and The Uses of the Canon, and been a professor and visiting professor at major universities across the world. He looks back here on what led to his very early retirement from academic life. He now lives on the Isle of Wight where he continues to write, not only autobiography, but poetry and fiction. ‘A priest who has lost his faith,’ is how he styles himself, ‘not in the Word, but in the Church.’ His monumental verse translation of Virgil’s Aeneid has just come out with Author House. He threatens much more to come, including a volume of poetry entitled An All But Perfect God, and a historical novel on the death of Virgil.