I cannot possibly do better at describing either his theory or his method
than this article from
The Renaissance Society of America, found on this web page:
http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+Absence+of+Grace:+Sprezzatura+and+Suspicio
n+in+Two+Renaissance...-a082554413





Harry Berger, Jr., The Absence of Grace: Sprezzatura and Suspicion in Two
Renaissance Courtesy Books. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2000. xiv +
267pp. $55. (cl), $18.95 (pbk). ISBN
ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) ? ISBN m 
: 0-8047-3904-8 (cl), 0-8047-3905-6 (pbk).

If I understand it correctly, Harry Berger's argument in The Absence of
Grace goes something like this: Castiglione's Book of the Courtier
Book of the Courtier


 and della Casa's Galateo define certain courtly values "under the
appearance" of embracing them, but they also "distance themselves from what
they
represent" (5). Sprezzatura, "an art of behaving as if always under
surveillance" (12), defines the new role of a courtly aristocracy that is
overtaking
the old feudal nobility. The latter based its claims for status upon the
materiality of "blood" and the myth of "grace," both signaling a "divinely
bestowed (that is,
in7born
, inherited) superiority" (13). The "technology" of sprezzatura, on the
other hand, could allow any upwardly-mobile self-achiever to attain status in
the absence of blood or grace. The resulting problematic generates a culture
of suspicion in which good manners and art might resemble and replace
transcendent virtue and in which speaker and writers, whether as fictional
narrators or authorial personae, might a rticulate one set of values while
also
espousing another. This is precisely what happens in the discursive practice
of
the Courtier and Galateo. Berger asks early on, "Can we trust in the
narrator's reliability?" (27), and he pursues his analysis with regard not
just to
the authorial personae but also to the individual interlocutors in both
dialogues.



A host of complications affects the outcome, chief among them
representations of sex and gender performance that reveal gynophobic
tendencies: "The
text depicts the double-bind of profeminism in narrative terms by placing
increasing emphasis on the effect of gynephobic motives" (92). Because authors
and readers might take the implications of this view more seriously than do
the interlocutors, an element of structural irony disturbs the text and the
fiction that it represents. In Castiglione's Courtier "the view from within
Urbino is countered by a view from abroad" (163). In della Casa's Galateo
dissonant

 notes of cynicism, irony, sarcasm, and resistance expose "competitive and
anxiety-ridden practices ... under the silky elegance of the courtly ideal"
(213). In the resulting semiotics
semiotics or semiology, discipline deriving from the American logician C.
S. Peirce and the French linguist Ferdinand de Saussure. It has come to mean
generally the study of any cultural product (e.g., a text) as a formal
system of signs.
 of male self-subversion, good manners appear founded on fear and loathing
fear and loathing - (Hunter S. Thompson) A state inspired by the prospect
of dealing with certain real-world systems and standards that are totally
brain-damaged but ubiquitous - Intel 8086s, COBOL, EBCDIC, or any IBM machine
except the Rios (also known as the RS/6000).
.....
 of the female body.

I recognize that I have truncated a subtle and complex argument. But I have
also tried to confer an order and direction that the argument does not
always have. The principal problem appears to be the density and specificity
of
its author's references both to the primary texts of Castiglione and della
Casa, and also to secondary texts of theory and criticism. Berger's
discussion evokes Freud, Mauss, Lacan, Elias, Foucault, Bourdieu, and others
but
rarely engages them head-on. He saves his close-up engagement for a dialogue
--
generous and respectful and collegially inspired, to be sure -- with North
American academic criticism of the past two decades, summoning the estimable
 work of Wayne Rebhorn, Constance Jordan, Thomas Greene, and others for
further refinement and particular nuance. Berger's microscopic readings
oprimary texts invite what the author himself calls an "overattentive
scrutiny"
(31) or what he also calls "the oddly restrictive New Critical effect [of
promoting] the irony and complexity of the fiction" (83). Berger wants to
preserve the mid-twentieth-century virtue of close reading and wed it to the
late-twentieth-century virtue of cultural criticism. I believe that both
virtues
simply do not exist in such pure forms. The Absence of Grace goes at close
reading by seeking to explicate with geometrical precision a narratorial
standpoint refracted   by parsimony

" (208) that Berger would endorse about an author's representation of his
narrator

(s). At the same time it approaches cultural criticism with a curious lack
of reference to social, cultural, historical, and intertextual



 detail. Some contextual allusions to Boccaccio, Ficino, Machiavelli, and
others occur, but on the whole the extended discussions of critical concerns
and methodological procedures overshadow them. Berger must be commended for
the acuity of his presentation, for the rigor

 of his thinking, and for the evident generosity of his citations to
colleagues. Few of hi s peers have gone to such great lengths to respect the
achievements of his predecessors and to build upon them with such honest
admiration.

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