Hi Arlo,

I don't log on much anymore, and have only now caught this.  I've been thinking 
about Hadot's notion of a spiritual exercise for a while, though it is only 
recently that I've had a chance to begin applying it in my own work.  (I have 
no relationship, however, to Foucault's use of it.)  It's a concept that has 
surfaced in one of my hobbyhorses (Rorty), and is attracting notice from 
Americanists, I believe, as well.  (I can cite Thomas Augst's The Clerk's Tale: 
Young Men and Moral Life in Nineteenth-Century America for an interesting 
application to understand Emerson's relationship to the period.)  

The CFP also registers what I think is a growing counter-theory movement in 
literary criticism, one that is also associated with pragmatism, Wittgenstein, 
Stanley Cavell, and Charles Altieri.  This is one is trying to take back the 
word "aesthetic" from the post-Marxist dispensation of criticism that has 
associated the aesthetic and literary with bourgeois ideology and class 
interests.  The turn away from these things led to a turn away from "close 
reading" as a critical practice, which is also receiving renewed interest (or, 
has become a new rallying banner).

My work has turned in all of these directions, though I haven't been able to 
get anything definite to cohere in my dissertation yet.  However, I've written 
two things over the last couple years that might be of interest to people.  One 
is a paper I delivered to fellow grads in my department, "Literature as 
Equipment for Living and as Spiritual Exercise."  It deploys the first idea 
from Kenneth Burke, and I discuss and quote long extracts from Hadot in sec. 6 
and 9.  A footnote also refers to an essay "Touchstones," which attempts to 
develop a more concrete sense of practices of reading and thinking.  (If one is 
alert, one might also notice an allusion to my history with Pirsig in the name 
of the third practice of reading.)

http://pirsigaffliction.blogspot.com/2014/06/literature-as-equipment-for-living-and.html
http://pirsigaffliction.blogspot.com/2014/07/touchstones.html

Maybe I should look into sending an abstract the conference!

Best,

Matt
                                          
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