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Stanley Cavell: A Bibliography 1951-1995 ©1995, Basil Blackwell. All Rights Reserved. [Appearing in A Cavell Reader, edited by Stephen Mulhall.] by Peter S. Fosl Assistant Professor of Philosophy Department of Philosophy, Religion, Classics Hollins College Roanoke, Virginia 24020-1513 U.S.A. (540) 362-6025 / 6655 FAX (540) 362-6346 / 6642 Internet: [email protected]
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Page 1: Cavell Bibliography 1995

 Stanley Cavell: A Bibliography 1951-1995©1995, Basil Blackwell.  All Rights Reserved.

[Appearing in A Cavell Reader, edited by Stephen Mulhall.]

by Peter S. FoslAssistant Professor of Philosophy

Department of Philosophy, Religion, ClassicsHollins CollegeRoanoke, Virginia  24020-1513U.S.A.(540) 362-6025 / 6655FAX (540) 362-6346 / 6642

Internet:  [email protected]

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Books(Chronologically)

Stanley Cavell (1926- ),  Philosophical Passages: Wittgenstein, Emerson, Austin, Derrida,  Bucknell Lectures in Literary Theory 12, general editors Michael Payne and Harold Schweizer (Oxford:  Basil Blackwell, Ltd., 1995).  Includes:1.  Michael Payne, "Introduction," 1-11.2.  Stanley Cavell, "Emerson's Constitutional Amending: Reading 'Fate'," 12-41.  Delivered at Bucknell University, 6 May 1993.3.  Stanley Cavell, "What Did Derrida Want of Austin?" 42-65.  Delivered at Bucknell University, 4 May 1993.4.  Seminar on "What Did Derrida Want of Austin?" 66-90.  At Bucknell University 5 May 1993. (Text revised December 1993).5.  "The Self of Philosophy: An Interview with Stanley Cavell," 91-103.  With Richard Fleming, Bucknell University, 6 May 1993.6.  Richard Fleming, "Continuing Cavell: Side Roads of the Claim of Reason,"104-17.  With "Appendix:  The Source Text for 'Continuing Cavell'," 117-24.7.  Stanley Cavell, "Notes and Afterthoughts on the Opening of Wittgenstein's Investigations," 125-86.8.  Peter S. Fosl and Michael Payne, "Stanley Cavell:  A Bibliography 1958-1994," 187-97.

A Pitch of Philosophy:  Autobiographical Exercises  (Cambridge, MA:  Harvard University Press, 1994).  The Jerusalem-Harvard Lectures, delivered at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem 22, 24, and 26 November 1992 under the title, "Trades of Philosophy."  Includes:Overture.1.  "Philosophy and the arrogation of Voice."2.  "Counter-Philosophy and the Pawn of Voice.""The Metaphysical Voice.""Worlds of Difference.""Pictures of Destruction.""Derrida's Austin and the Stake of Positivism.""Exclusion of the Theory of Excuses:  On the Tragic.""Exclusion of the Theory of the Non-Serious.""Skepticism and the Serious.""Two Pictures of Communication:  Assigning.""What (Thing) Is Transmitted?  Austin Moves.""Two Pictures of Language in Relation to (the) World.""Three Pictures of My Attachment to My Words:  Signing."3.  "Opera and the Lease of Voice."

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Bibliography.Acknowledgments.

Conditions nobles et ignobles, translation by Christian Fournier and Sandra Laugier (Paris: Editions de l'éclat, 1993).  A translation of Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome (1990).

Le déni de savoir dans six pièces de Shakespeare, translation by Jean-Pierre Maquerlot, Chemins de pensee (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1993).  A translation of Disowning Knowledge (1987). 

A la recherche du bonheur, translation by Christian Fournier and Sandra Laugier (Paris: Cahiers du Cinema, 1993).  A translation of  Pursuits of Happiness: The Hollywood Comedy of Remarriage (1981).

The Senses of Walden: An Expanded Edition (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1992).  Previously appeared in 1981 on Northpoint Press.

Statuts d'Emerson: constitution, philosophie, politique, translation by Christian Fournier and Sandra Laugier (Combas, France:  Edition de l'éclat, 1992).  With an appendix including work by Ralph Waldo Emerson ("Destin," "Experience," "La loi sur les esclaves fugitifs"), Friedrich Nietzsche ("Fatum et histoire"), and Christian Fournier ("Note sur la situation politique d'Emerson").

Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome:  The Constitution of Emersonian Perfectionism,  The Paul Carus Lectures, 1988,  Series 17 (Peru, Illinois:  Open Court Inc., 1991).

Une nouvelle Amérique encore inapprochable, translation by Sandra Laugier-Rabaté  (Combas, France:  Editions de l'éclat, 1991).  A translation of This New Yet Unapproachable America (1989).

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Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome:  The Constitution of Emersonian Perfectionism (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1990).  The Paul Carus Lectures, delivered before the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association, April 1988." Includes:1.  Preface and Acknowledgments.2.  Introduction:  "Staying the Course."  Addressing the pedagogical context in which the material for these essays was developed, namely a 1987 undergraduate course Cavell taught at Harvard University called "Moral Perfectionism."3.  "Aversive Thinking:  Emersonian Representations in Heidegger and Nietzsche."4.  "The Argument of the Ordinary:  Scenes of Instruction in Wittgenstein and in Kripke."  Largely addresses Saul Kripke's Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language (Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 1982). See also, on this topic:  G. P. Baker and P. M. S. Hacker, Scepticism, Rules and Language  (Oxford, 1984) and Rules, Grammar, and Necessity (Oxford, 1985);  and Colin McGinn, Wittgenstein On Meaning (New York, 1984).5.  "The Conversation of Justice:  Rawls and the Drama of Consent."  Largely addresses John Rawls's A Theory of Justice (Cambridge, MA:  Harvard University Press/Belknap Press, 1971) and "Two Concepts of Rules" (The Philosophical Review 64  [January, 1965], 3-32).6.  Epilogue.7.  Appendix A:  "Hope against Hope."8.  Appendix B:  "A Cover Letter."  To members of the Jerusalem workshop on Institutions of Interpretation, at the Center for Literary Studies, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 15 May 1988.9.  Bibliography.

This New Yet Unapproachable America:  Lectures after Emerson after Wittgenstein, (Albequerque, NM:  Living Batch Press/Chicago:  University of Chicago Press, 1989).  The 1987 Fredrick Ives Carpenter Lectures, delivered at the University of Chicago." Includes:" " 1.  "Work in Progress:  An Introductory Report."" " 2.  "Declining Decline:  Wittgenstein as a Philosopher of Culture."" " 3.  "Finding as Founding:  Taking Steps in Emerson's 'Experience'."" " 4.  Acknowledgments." " 5.  Works Cited.

In Quest of the Ordinary:  Lines of Skepticism and Romanticism  (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1988).  Includes:  " " 1.  Preface and Acknowledgments."" " 2.  At Berkeley" " " The Mrs. William Beckman Lectures (1983)

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" " " " "The Philosopher in American Life (Toward Thoreau and Emerson)."" " " " "Emerson, Coleridge, Kant  (Terms as Conditions)."" " " " "Texts of Recovery  (Coleridge, Wordsworth, Heidegger. . .)."" " " " "Recounting Gains, Showing Losses (A Reading of The Winter's Tale)."" " 3.  At Stanford" " " Conference:  Reconstructing Individualism (1984)" " " " "Being Odd, Getting Even (Descartes, Emerson, Poe)."" " " " Postscripts" " " " " "Skepticism and a Word concerning Deconstruction."" " " " " "Poe's Perversity and the Imp(ulse) of Skepticism."" " " " " "The Skeptical and the Metaphorical."" " 4.  At Stanford" " " The Tanner Lecture (1986)" " " " "The Uncanniness of the Ordinary."" " 5.  At Vienna" " " Celebration Lecture (1986)" " " " "The Fantastic of Philosophy."" " 6.  Bibliography.

Themes Out of School:  Effects and Causes (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1988).  Reprint of 1984 North Point Press edition.

Nach der Philosophie:  Essays von Stanley Cavell, edited by Kurt Rudolf Fischer & Ludwig Nagl; Klagenfurter Beiträge zur Philosophie, series editors Thomas Macho & Christof Subik (Wien:  Verlag des Verbandes der wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaften Österreichs, 1987).  Includes:1.  "Vorbemerkung der Herausgeber,"  5-7.  2.    "Müssen wir meinen, was wir sagen?"  9-62.3.    "Der Zugang zu Wittgensteins Spätphilosophie," 63-93.4.    "Die Welt durch die Kamera gesehen" (from The World Viewed), 95-136.5.    "Denken--Was heißt das in der Fotografie?" 137-60.6.    "Danebenstehen, Gleichziehen:  Bedrohungen der Individualität" (mit einem Nachtrag), 161-206  (trans.  Herbert Hrachovec).7.    "Das Phantastische der Philosophie,"  207-17.  Cavell gave an English reading of this article at the Wittgensteinshaus in Vienna on 26 May 1986 on the occasion of the publication of the first volume of Wiener Reihe, Themen der Philosophie:  Wo Steht die Analytische Philosophie heute? edited by Ludwig Nagl & R. Heinrich (Wien:  Oldenbourg, 1986).  First appeared in American Poetry Review 15.3 (1986).  Reprinted in English in In Quest of the Ordinary (1988), 181-88.

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8.    "How can one inherit Europe?  Stanley Cavell über Tradition und Neubeginn der amerikanischen Philosophie,"  Ein Interview mit Leonhard Schmeiser, 219-28.  Broadcast on Österreichischen Rundfunks (Ö1) program "Dimensionen," 10 July 1986.Rezensionsanhang:9.  "Kurt Rudolf Fischer über Stanley Cavell: Must We Mean What We Say?  A Book of Essays," 231-39. 10.  "Kurt Rudolf Fischer über Stanley Cavell:  The Claim of Reason. Wittgenstein, Skepticism, Morality and Tragedy," 240-47.  First appeared in Wiener Jahrbuch für Philosophie VII (1974).11.  "Ludwig Nagl:  Stanley Cavells Versuch, die Tiefengrammatik des Films zu entschlüsseln," 249-54.

Disowning Knowledge:  In Six Plays of Shakespeare (Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 1987).Includes:1.  Preface and Acknowledgments.2.  "The Avoidance of Love:  A Reading of King Lear."3.  "Othello and the Stake of the Other."4.  "Coriolanus and Interpretations of Politics."  Previously reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 60-96.5.  "Hamlet's Burden of Proof."6.  "Recounting Gains, Showing Losses:  The Winter's Tale." Reprinted in In Quest of the Ordinary (1988), 76-101.

Themes Out of School:  Effects and Causes (San Francisco: North Point Press, 1984).  Includes:1.  Preface.2.  "The Thought of Movies."3.  "The Politics of Interpretation" ("Politics As Opposed to What?")  (with "Postscript:  A Reply to Gayatri Spivak").  4.  "Coriolanus and Interpretations of Politics" ("Who does the wolf love?")  (with a postscript).  Reprinted in Disowning Knowledge (1987), 143-78.5.  "A Cover Letter to Moliére's Misanthrope."6.  "On Makavejev on Bergman."7.  "A Reply to John Hollander."8.  "Foreword to Jay Cantor's The Space Between."9.  "North by Northwest."10.  "What Becomes of Things on Film?"11.  "The Ordinary as Uneventful:  A Note on the Annales Historians."12.  "Existentialism and Analytical Philosophy."13.  "The Fact of Television."

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Pursuits of Happiness:  The Hollywood Comedy of Remarriage (Cambridge, MA:  Harvard University Press, 1981).  Includes:1.  Introduction:  "Words for a Conversation."2.  "Cons and Pros:  The Lady Eve."3.  "Knowledge as Transgression:  It Happened One Night."4.  "Leopards in Connecticut:  Bringing Up Baby."5.  "The Importance of Importance:  The Philadelphia Story."6.  "Counterfeiting Happiness:  His Girl Friday."7.  "The Courting of Marriage:  Adam's Rib."8.  "The Same and Different:  The Awful Truth."9.  Appendix:  "Film in the University."

The Senses of  Walden:  An Expanded Edition (San Francisco:  North Point Press, 1981).  Includes The Senses of  Walden (1972)  plus:1.  "Thinking of Emerson."2.  "An Emerson Mood."  Delivered as the Scholar's Day Address at Kalamazoo College, 1980.

The World Viewed:  Reflections on the Ontology of Film [enlarged edition] (Cambridge, MA:  Harvard University Press, 1979).  Harvard Paperback no. 151 issued 1980.  Includes all of the 1971 edition plus:1.  "Foreword to the Enlarged Edition."2.  "More of The World Viewed."

The Claim of Reason:  Wittgenstein, Skepticism, Morality, and Tragedy (Oxford:  The Clarendon Press, 1979).  Reissued on Oxford University Press 1982.  Includes:Part One:  Wittgenstein and the Concept of Human Knowledge." I.  Criteria and Judgment." II.  Criteria and Skepticism." III.  Austin and Examples." IV.  What a Thing Is (Called)." V.  Natural and Conventional." " Normal and Natural.Part Two:  Skepticism and the Existence of the World." VI.  The Quest of Traditional Epistemology:  Opening." " The Reasonableness of Doubt." " The Appeal to Projective Imagination.

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" " The Irrelevance of Projective Imagination as Direct Criticism." " A Further Problem." VII.  Excursus on Wittgenstein's Vision of Language." " Learning a Word." " Projecting a Word." VIII.  The Quest of Traditional Epistemology:  Closing." " The Philosopher's Ground for Doubt Requires Projection." " The Philosopher's Projection Poses a Dilemma.The Philosopher's Basis; and a More Pervasive Conflict with His New Critics." " The Philosopher's Context Is Non-claim." " The Philosopher's Conclusion Is Not a Discovery." " Two Interpretations of Traditional Epistemology; Phenomenology." " The Knowledge of Existence.Part Three:  Knowledge and the Concept of Morality." IX.  Knowledge and the Basis of Morality." X.  An Absence of Morality." XI.  Rules and Reasons." " Promising and Punishing." " Play and the Moral Life." XII.  The Autonomy of Morals.Part Four:  Skepticism and the Problem of Others." XIII.  Between Acknowledgment and Avoidance." " The parable of the boiling pot." " The private language argument." " The allegory of words; interpretation; seeing something as something." " Seeing human beings as human beings." " Embryos." " Slaves." " Soul-blindness." " The human guise." " Knower and known." " My relations to myself." " Believing something and believing someone." " Believing myself." " Arguments from analogy and from design." " Frog body and frog soul." " Am I, or am I in, my body?  Intactness and connection." " Statues and dolls." " Perfecting an automaton." " Feelings and "feelings."" " The ordonnance of the body; wonder vs. amazement." " The Polonius of the problem of others." " The Outsider." " The Concept of horror; of the monstrous." " The (active) skeptical recital concerning other minds." " Empathic projection.

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" " The seamlessness of projection." " The question of a "best case" for others." " Confinement and exposure in knowing." " Unrestricted acknowledgment; the Outcast." " Toward others we live our skepticism.Suspicion of unrestricted owning as pathological, adolescent, or romantic." " The representative case for other minds is not defined by the generic." " The passive skeptical recital concerning other minds." " Skepticism and sanity again." " Asymmetries between the two directions of skepticism." " Dr. Faust and Dr. Frankenstein." " Passiveness and activeness; the Friend and the Confessor." " The extraordinariness of the ordinary; romanticism." " Narcissism." " Proving the existence of the human." " The vanishing of the human." " The question of the history of the problem of others:" " " 1.  Distinctions of madness." " " 2.  The other as replacement of God." " " 3.  Blake and the sufficiency of finitude." " " 4.  The science and the magic of the human." " " 5.  Literature as the knowledge of the Outsider.Bibliography." "

The World Viewed:  Reflections on the Ontology of Film (New York:  Penguin Books, 1977).

Must We Mean What We Say?  A Book of Essays (Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 1976). 

The Senses of  Walden (New York:  The Viking Press, 1972).  Reissued by The Viking Press in 1974; Viking Compass edition also 1974.  Includes:1.  Preface.2.  Acknowledgments.3.  "Words."4.  "Sentences."5.  "Portions."

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The World Viewed:  Reflections on the Ontology of Film (New York:  The Viking Press, 1971).  Viking Compass edition also 1971.  Reissued on The Viking Press in 1974.  Includes:1.  Preface.2.  "An Autobiography of Companions."3.  "Sights and Sounds."4.  "Photograph and Screen."5.  "Audience, Actor, and Star."6.  "Types:  Cycles as Genres."7.  "Ideas of Origin."8.  "Baudelaire and the Myths of Film."9.  "The Military Man and the Woman."10.  "The Dandy."11.  "End of the Myths."12.  "The Medium and the Media of Film."13.  "The World as Mortal:  Absolute Age and Youth."14.  "The World as a Whole:  Color."15.  "Automatism."16.  "Excursus:  Some Modernist Painting."17.  "Exhibition and Self-Reference."18.  "The Camera's Implications."19.  "Assertions in Techniques."20.  "The Acknowledgment of Silence."

Must We Mean What We Say?  A Book of Essays (New York:  Charles Scribner's Sons, 1969).   Sections 1, 6, 7, 10, and 11 are published here for the first time.  Includes:1.  Foreword:  "An Audience for Philosophy."2.  "Must We Mean What We Say?"3.  "The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy."4.  "Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy."5.  "Austin at Criticism."6.  "Ending the Waiting Game:  A Reading of Beckett's Endgame."  Written in the summer and fall of 1964, this essay served as the basis for lectures delivered in Harvard College's Humanities course and for lectures delivered at Western Reserve University, the Case Institute, the University of Saskatchewan, and the University of North Carolina.7.  "Kierkegaard's On Authority and Revelation."  Based on remarks prepared for a colloquium on this work held at the University of Minnesota's Department of Philosophy, January 1966.8.  "Music Discomposed."9.  "A Matter of Meaning It."10.  "Knowing and Acknowledging."  An expanded version of remarks delivered at a colloquium at the University of Rochester, May 1966, responding to Norman Malcolm's paper, "The Privacy of Experience," later published in Epistemology:  New Essays in the

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Theory of Knowledge, edited by Avrum Stroll, pp. 129-58 (New York:  Harper and Row, 1967).  Cavell's essay also addresses John W. Cook's, "Wittgenstein on Privacy" (The Philosophical Review 74 [1965], 281-314); this latter reprinted in Wittgenstein:  The Philosophical Investigations, edited by George Pritcher (New York:  Doubleday Anchor Original, 1966) along with Cavell's "The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy," 151-85.11.  "The Avoidance of Love:  A Reading of King Lear."  Part I was written in the summer of 1966 for Harvard College's Humanities course lectures; Part II was written in the summer and fall of 1967.  Reprinted in Disowning Knowledge (1987), 39-124.

 Stanley Louis Cavell.  The Claim to Rationality:  Knowledge and the Basis of Morality (Cambridge, MA:  Photographic Department of the Harvard University Library, 1974).   [Microfilm of typescript.  1 reel. 35 mm.]  Submitted to Harvard University as Cavell's PhD dissertation in 1961.  Much of this text was later incorporated into The Claim of Reason (1979).  See especially Part III of The Claim of Reason ("Knowledge and the Concept of Morality") and its subsection IX ("Knowledge and the Basis of Morality").  These texts were informed by a seminar Cavell jointly taught with Thompson Clarke in 1959-60 on Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations .

Articles & Anthology Contributions(Chronologically)

"Time after Time:  Stanley Cavell on the Future Today."  London Review of Books 17.1 (12 January 1995), 6-8.  On Emerson, Nietzsche and the future.  An earlier version in French delivered at the 1994 Le  Monde/Le Mans conference on "The Future Today."

"Foreword" to Northrop Frye's A Natural Perspective:  The Development of Shakespearean Comedy and Romance (New York:  Columbia University Press, 1965), ix-xxiii.  Frye's text originally delivered as the Bampton Lectures in America (no. 15) in November 1963 at Columbia University; Columbia reissued the text with a foreword by Cavell in 1995.

"What is the Emersonian Event? A Comment on Kateb's Emerson."  New Literary History 25.4 (Autumn 1994), 951-58.  Delivered 20 August 1993 before the American Political Science Association, addressing a selection  entitled, "Emerson's Philosophy of Self-Reliant Activity," from a then-forthcoming text by Kateb.  See George Kateb, The Inner Ocean: Individualism and Democratic Culture (Ithaca, NY:  Cornell University Press, 1994).

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"Nichts versteht sich von selbst:  Zur Sprache des Groucho-Marxismus." Merkur-Deutsche Zeitschrift für Europaisches Denken 48.4 (April 1994), 300-308.  A translation  by W. Winkler of "Nothing Goes Without Saying:  Reading the Marx Brothers."

"Nothing Goes Without Saying: Reading the Marx Brothers." London Review of Books 16.1 (6 January 1994), 3-5.

"Macbeth Appalled (II)."  Raritan: A Quarterly Review 12.3 (Winter, 1993), 1-15.

"A la recherche du bonheur" [book excerpt].  Cahiers du Cinema 466 (April 1993), 84-85.  Translation by Christian Fournier and Sandra Laugier.

"Macbeth Appalled (I)."  Raritan: A Quarterly Review 12.2 (Fall, 1992), 1-15.

"L'Humeur Emerson."  Critique: Revue générale des publications française et étranger 48.541-42 (Juin-Juillet, 1992), 435-48.  A French translation, by Sandra Laugier and Christiane Chauviré, of "An Emerson Mood," appearing in The Senses of Walden:  An Expanded Edition (San Francisco:  North Point Press, 1981).  This volume of Critique, "La nouvelle Angleterre," is largely devoted to Emerson, and many of the articles presented cite Cavell.

"In The Meantime:  Authority, Tradition, and the Future of the Disciplines,"  The Yale Journal of Criticism 5.2 (Spring, 1992), 229-37.  From the Tenth Anniversary Symposium for the Whitney Humanities Center, 15-16 February 1991.

"Austin at Criticism."  In The Linguistic Turn, edited by  Richard Rorty, pp. 250-60 (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1992).  First edition, 1967.

"Aversive Thinking:  Emersonian Representations in Heidegger and Nietzsche."  New Literary History 22.1 (Winter, 1991),  129-60.

"The Idea of Home."  Social Research:  An International Quarterly of the Social Sciences 58.1 (Spring, 1991), 9-10.  This issue of the journal collects papers delivered at the New School for Social Research's conference, "Home: A Place in the World," held at the New School in October 1990.  Cavell's piece serves as an introduction to the collection.  The conference was part of a series of artistic and academic events on the same topic.

"Stella's Taste."  In Working Papers in Cultural Studies 8, The Cultural Studies Project (Cambridge, MA:  Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, 1991).  On microfilm:  AS36.M414.A3, #8.  Delivered at MIT, 4 May 1991.

"Emerson's Aversive Thinking."  In Romantic Revolutions:  Criticism and Theory, edited by Kenneth R. Johnstone, Gilbert Chaitin, Karen Hanson, and Herbert Marks (Bloomington:  Indiana University Press, 1990), 219-49.  First delivered at the Indiana Romanticism conference, March 1988.  A subsequent version delivered as the first of

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three Carus Lectures before the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association, April 1988.  Revised and reprinted as "Aversive Thinking: Emersonian Representations in Heidegger and Nietzsche" in Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome (1990) and in New Literary History 22.1 (1991).

"Ugly Duckling, Funny Butterfly:  Bette Davis and Now, Voyager." Critical Inquiry 16.2 (Winter, 1990),  213-47.  Followed by a postscript.

"Postscript (1989):  To Whom It May Concern."  Critical Inquiry 16.2 (Winter, 1990), 248-89.

In "Editor's Notes." Critical Inquiry 17.1 (Fall, 1990), 238-44.  A response to an Editorial Note by Tania Modleski addressing the character of "the unknown woman" in film, criticizing Cavell on feminist and scholarly grounds.

"What Photography Calls Thinking."  In Raritan Reading, edited by Richard Poirier, pp. 47-65 (New Brunswick, NJ:  Rutgers University Press, 1990).

"Who Disappoints Whom?"  Critical Inquiry 15.3 (Spring, 1989), 606-10.  Read 8 December 1988 at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government on the occasion of a lecture by Allan Bloom entitled, "The Attack on Reason."  This essay is also a reply to Bloom's The Closing of the American Mind.

"Sights and Sounds:  from The World Viewed" [from Chpts. 2-6].  In Aesthetics:  A Critical Anthology, edited by George Dickie, Richard Sclafani, Ronald Roblin, pp. 560-75.  2nd edition (New York:  St. Martin's Press, 1989).  Followed by Stanley Bates's, "Movies Viewed:  Cavell on Medium and Motion Pictures," 576-82.  St. Martin's issued an earlier edition of this volume in 1977 without Bates's essay.  Includes:1.  "Photograph and Screen," 564-66.2.  "Audience, Actor and Star," 566-68.3.  "Types; Cycles as Genres," 568-73.4.  "Ideas of Origin," 573-75.

"Naughty Orators:  Negation of Voice in Gaslight."   In Languages of the Unsayable:  The Play of Negativity in Literature and Literary Theory, edited by Sanford Budick & Wolfgang Iser, pp. 340-77.  Irvine Studies in the Humanities (New York:  Columbia University Press, 1989).  Includes "Postscript (1988),"  373-77.

"Notes after Austin."  In Encounters, edited by Kai Eridson, pp. 116-123.  New Haven, CT:  Yale University Press, 1989.

"The Uncanniness of the Ordinary."  The Tanner Lectures on Human Values VIII, edited by Sterling M. McMurrin, pp. 81-117 (Salt Lake City:  University of Utah Press/Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 1988).  Delivered at Stanford University 3 & 8 April 1986.  Reprinted in In Quest of the Ordinary (1988), 153-78.

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"Psychoanalysis and Cinema:  The Melodrama of the Unknown Woman."  In Die Philosophen und Freud.  Ein offene Debatte," edited by H. Vetter & Ludwig Nagl, pp. 199-226 (Wien/München:  Oldenbourg, 1988).  A shortened version of Cavell's article appears in Images in Our Souls:  Cavell, Psychoanalysis, and Cinema (1987); Cavell shortened this article himself.

"Two Cheers for Romance."  In Passionate Attachments:  Thinking about Love, edited by Willard Gaylin (M.D.) & Ethel Persons (M.D.), pp.  85-100 (New York:  The Free Press [Macmillian], 1988).  From remarks delivered at a symposium sponsored by the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research and the Association for Psychoanalytic Medicine, 10 November 1984.

"Psychoanalysis and Cinema:  The Melodrama of the Unknown Woman."  In The Trial(s) of Psychoanalysis, edited by Françoise Meltzer, pp. 227-58 (Chicago:  University of Chicago Press, 1988).  A revised and expanded edition of the 1987 article appearing in Images in Our Souls:  Cavell, Psychoanalysis and Cinema, Psychiatry and the Humanities 10, edited by Joseph H. Smith and William Kerrigan, pp.  11-43 (Baltimore:  Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987).

"Declining Decline:  Wittgenstein as a Philosopher of Culture."  Inquiry:  An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy and the Social Sciences  (Norway) 31.3 (Spring, 1988), 253-64.

 "Notes after Austin."  The Yale Review 76.3 (Spring, 1987),  313-22.

"Psychoanalysis and Cinema:  The Melodrama of the Unknown Woman." In  Images in Our Souls:  Cavell, Psychoanalysis and Cinema, Psychiatry and the Humanities 10, edited by Joseph H. Smith and William Kerrigan, pp.  11-43 (Baltimore:  Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987).  This article incorporates material from "Freud and Philosophy:  A Fragment" (Critical Inquiry 13.2 [Winter, 1987] 386-93).

"Freud and Philosophy, a Fragment."  Critical  Inquiry 13.2 (Winter, 1987), 386-93.

"Emerson, Coleridge, Kant.  Emersons Fate und Coleridges Biographia Literaria."  In Romantik Literatur und Philosophie, edited by Volker Bohn, pp. 183-212 (Frankfurt am Main:  Suhrkamp Verlag, 1987).  A translation of Cavell's article, "Genteel Responses to Kant?  In Emerson's 'Fate' and in Coleridge's Biographia Literaria," Raritan 3.2 (Fall, 1983), 34-61.  Translated by Oliver R. Scholz and Eckhard Lobsien.

"North by Northwest." In A Hitchcock Reader, edited by Marshall Deutelbaum & Leland A. Poague, pp. 249-64 (Ames:  Iowa State University Press, 1986).

"Danebenstehen, gleichziehen:  Bedrohungen der Individualität."  In Wo steht die Analytische Philosophy heute?  edited by Ludwig Nagl & R. Heinrich, translated by Herbert Hrachovec, pp. 116-49; Wiener Reihe, Themen der Philosophie 1  (Wien/München:  Oldenbourg, 1986).  First appeared as "Being Odd, Getting Even" in

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Salmagundi:  A Quarterly of the Humanities and Social Sciences 67 (Summer, 1985), 97-128.

"In Quest of the Ordinary:  Texts of Recovery."  In Romanticism and Contemporary Criticism,  edited and with a Preface by Morris Eaves and Michael Fischer, pp.  183-239 (Ithaca:  Cornell University Press, 1986).  Portions reprinted in In  Quest of the Ordinary (1988) as "Texts of Recovery (Coleridge, Wordsworth, Heidegger)," 50-75, and portions as "Poe's Perversity and the Imp(ulse) of Skepticism," 137-43.

"Denken--was heißt das in der Fotografie?"  In Camera Austria, pp. 32-43 (Graz, Österreich:  Forum Stadtpark, 1986).  Delivered at a symposium in Graz, "Die Kraft (und die Herrlichkeit) der Fotografie," 1985.  This is the first German translation of "What Photography Calls Thinking," Raritan 4.4 (Spring, 1985), 1-21.  Translation by Klaus Feichtenberger.

"The Fantastic of Philosophy."  The American Poetry Review 15.3  (May-June,1986), 45-47. Reprinted in In Quest of the Ordinary (1988), 181-88; and Nach der Philosophie (1987), 207-17.  From remarks prepared for a panel entitled, "We Are Not Alone," part of a day-long symposium, "Fukiyose (Gathering):  The Fantastic in Art and Literature," held by the Japan Institute at Harvard University on 25 May 1985.  The remarks are, in part, comments on papers submitted to the panel by PhD candidates at the Institute.

"Hope Against Hope."  The American Poetry Review 15.1  (January-February, 1986), 9-13.  Reprinted in Conditions Handsome and Unhandsome (1991), 129-38.    Delivered before a convocation at Iona College.  Addresses Emerson and nuclear holocaust.

"Being Odd, Getting Even (Descartes, Emerson, Poe)."  In  Reconstructing Individualism:  Autonomy, Individuality, and the Self in Western Thought,  edited by Thomas C. Heller, Morton Sosna, and David E. Wellbery (with Arnold I. Davidson, Ann Swidler, and Ian Watt), pp.  278-313; cf. 13-14 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1986).  From remarks delivered at an interdisciplinary conference at the Stanford Humanities Center, "Reconstructing Individualism," 18-20 February 1984.  Reprinted in In Quest of the Ordinary (1988), 105-49, along with "The Skeptical and the Metaphorical," 144-49.  See also Salmagundi 67 (1985), 97-128.

"Hamlet's Burden of Proof."  Hebrew University Studies in Literature and the Arts 14 (Fall, 1986), 1-17.  Reprinted in Disowning Knowledge (1987), 179-91, including a "Postscript," 189-91.  Originally presented at Hebrew University, March 1986, and revised, often in the light of remarks by Ruth Nevo.

"A Capra Moment."  Humanities 6.4  (August, 1985), 3-7.

"Philosophy's Two Myths of Reading."  The Agni Review 22 (1985), 139-41.  An excerpt from "The Philosopher in American Life (Toward Thoreau and Emerson),"  the first of Cavell's 1983 Beckman Lectures at the University of California Berkeley as it appears in In Quest of the Ordinary (1988), 3-26. 

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"Being Odd, Getting Even: Threats to Individuality."  Salmagundi:  A Quarterly of the Humanities and Social Sciences 67 (Summer, 1985), 97-128.

"A Reply to Robert Mankin on The Claim of Reason."  Salmagundi:  A Quarterly of the Humanities and Social Sciences 67 (Summer, 1985), 90-96.  See Mankin's article in Salmagundi 67 (Summer, 1985), 66-89.

"The Division of Talent."  Critical Inquiry 11.4  (June, 1985), 519-38.

"What Photography Calls Thinking."  Raritan:  A Quarterly Review 4.4 (Spring, 1985), 1-21.

"'Who does the wolf love?' Coriolanus and Interpretations of Politics."  In Shakespeare and the Question of Theory,  edited by Patricia Parker and Geoffrey Hartman, pp.  245-72 (New York: Methuen, 1985).

"Emerson, Coleridge, Kant."  In Post-Analytic Philosophy, edited by John Rajchman and Cornel West, pp. 84-107 (New York:  Columbia University Press, 1985).

"Politics as Opposed to What?"  In The Politics of Interpretation,  edited by W. J. T. Mitchell, pp.  181-202 (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1983).

"Genteel Responses to Kant?  In Emerson's 'Fate' and in Coleridge's Biographia Literaria."  Raritan: A Quarterly Review 3.2  (Fall, 1983), 34-61.  Reprinted in In Quest of the Ordinary (1988), 27-49, as "Emerson, Coleridge, Kant (Terms as Conditions)."

"'Who does the wolf love?' Reading Coriolanus." Representations no.3 (Summer, 1983), 1-20.  Modified and expanded versions are reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 60-96, and Disowning Knowledge (1987), 143-78.  Delivered as part of a colloquium on Coriolanus held at the Humanities Institute at Stanford University, 10-12 September 1982.

"The Thought of Movies."  The Yale Review 72.2 (Winter, 1983), 181-200.  Reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 3-26.

"Thinking of Emerson."  In Essays in Kant's Aesthetics, edited by Ted Cohen & Paul Guyer, pp. 261-270 (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1982).

"The Fact of Television."  Daedalus:  Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 111.4 (Fall, 1982), 75-96.  Reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 235-68.

"Die Welt durch die Kamera gesehen."  In Theorien der Kunst, edited by Dieter Henrich & Wolfgang Iser, pp. 447-90 (Frankfurt am Main:  Suhrkamp Verlag, 1979).  Translation by Lore Iser.

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"Politics as Opposed to What?"  Critical Inquiry 9.1 (September, 1982), 157-78.  This issue is devoted to Critical Inquiry's symposium, "The Politics of Interpretation," held at the University of Chicago's Center for Continuing Education, 30-31 October and 1 November 1981.  The issue includes eight lectures delivered at the symposium plus panelists' subsequently written critical responses.  Reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 27-59.

"Foreword" to Jay Cantor's The Space Between:  Literature and Politics, pp. ix-xv (Baltimore:  Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981).  Reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 145-51.

"North by Northwest."  Critical Inquiry 7.4  (Summer, 1981), 761-76.  Reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 152-72.

"[An Afterimage--] On Makavejev on Bergman."  In  Film and Dreams:  An Approach to Bergman,  edited and with and introduction by Vlada Petric, pp. 197-220 (South Salem, NY:  Redgrave Publishing Co., 1981).  A collection of essays from the International Film Conference, "Bergman and Dreams," held at Harvard University, 27-29 January 1978.  Cavell's essay addresses Dusan Makavejev's Sweet Movie and WR: Mysteries of the Organism.  Cavell delivered the opening paper.  Reprinted in Critical Inquiry 6.2 (1979), 305-30, and in Themes Out of School (1984), 106-40.

With Hubert Dreyfus, Karsten Harries, John Haugeland, David C. Hoy, and Richard Rorty,  "Being True to Heidegger."  New York Review of Books 28.5 (1981), 45.

With M. Dickstein, R. Krauss, E. Goodheart, W. Phillips, P. Brooks, E. Kurtzweil, "The Effects of Critical-Theories on Practical Criticism, Cultural Journalism, and Reviewing."  Partisan Review 48.1 (1981), 9-35.

"Reflexions sur Emerson et Heidegger." Critique:  Revue générale des publications française et étranger 36.399-400 (Juin-Juillet, 1980), 719-29.  A translation of "Thinking of Emerson," first published in New Literary History: A Journal of Theory and Interpretation  11.1 (Autumn, 1979), 167-76; reprinted in The Senses of Walden:  An Expanded Edition (San Francisco:  North Point Press, 1981).  This issue of Critique is devoted to Anglo-American philosophy.  Translated by Marie-Anne Lescourret.

"A Reply to John Hollander."  Critical Inquiry 6.4 (Summer, 1980), 589-91.  Reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 141-44.

"Knowledge as Transgression:  Mostly a Reading of It Happened One Night."  Daedalus:  Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 109.2 (Spring, 1980), 147-75.  Addresses Frank Capra's It Happened One Night (1934).  From remarks presented at a symposium at Emory University in October 1979 entitled, "Intellect and Imagination:  The Limits and Presuppositions of Intellectual Inquiry."  A revised version appears in Pursuits of Happiness (1981), 71-110.

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"Epistemology and Tragedy:  A Reading of Othello" (together with a cover letter to Moliére's Alceste).  Daedalus:  Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 108.3 (Summer, 1979), 27-43.   See also The Claim of Reason (1979), Part IV, and Disowning Knowledge (1987), 39-124.

"Thinking of Emerson."  New Literary History:  A Journal of Theory and Interpretation  11.1 (Autumn, 1979), 167-76.  Reprinted in The Senses of Walden:  An Expanded Edition (1981), 121-38.

"Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy" [selection].  In Art and Philosophy:  Readings in Aesthetics, 2nd edition, edited by W. E. Kennick, pp. 333-41 (New York:  St. Martin's Press, 1979).  The first edition does not include Cavell.

[Excerpt from The Claim of Reason.]  L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E 8 (New York: June, 1979).

 [Selections from The World Viewed, Chpts. 2-6.]  In Film Theory and Criticism, edited by Gerald Mast & Marshall Cohen, 2nd edition,  pp.  306-20 (New York:  Oxford University Press, 1979).  Oxford University Press issued the first edition in 1974.   " Includes:"1.  "Photograph and Screen," 306-07.2.  "Audience, Actor, and Star," 308-10.3.  "Types; Cycles as Genres,"  311-17.4.  "Ideas of Origin,"   318-20.

"On Makavejev on Bergman."  Critical Inquiry 6.2 (Winter, 1979), 305-30.

"Pursuits of Happiness:  A Reading of The Lady Eve." New Literary History:  A Journal of Theory and Interpretation 10.3 (Spring, 1979), 581-601.  Addresses Preston Sturges's The Lady Eve (1941).  Originally presented at the annual Eastern Division meeting of the American Philosophical Association, December 1978, in Washington D.C.  A revised version appears in Pursuits of Happiness (1981), 45-70.

"The Avoidance of Love" [selection].  In Twentieth Century Interpretations of King Lear, edited by Janet Adelman, pp. 70-87 (Englewood Cliffs, NJ:  Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1978).

"What Becomes of Things on Film?"  Philosophy and Literature 2.2 (Fall, 1978), 249-57.  Addresses Ingmar Bergman's Persona, Luis Bunuel's Belle de Jour, Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo, and Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life.  Reprinted in Themes out of School (1984), 173-83.

"Sights and Sounds" [selections from The World Viewed, Chpts. 2-6].  In Aesthetics:  A Critical Anthology, edited by George Dickie & Richard J. Sclafani, pp.  366-83 (New York:  St. Martin's Press, 1977).  St. Martin's issued a second edition in 1989." Includes:  1.   "Photograph and Screen," 371-3.2.  "Audience, Actor, and Star," 373-5.

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3.  "Types; Cycles as Genres," 375-81.4.  "Ideas of Origin," 381-83.

"Film in the University or Leopards in Connecticut."  Quarterly Review of Film Studies 2.2 (May, 1977), 141-58.  A revised version of the essay previously appearing in the Georgia Review 30 (Summer, 1976), 233-62.  Originally presented at the CUNY-NEH Conference on Film and the University, organized by Marshall Cohen and Gerald Mast; held at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York , 15-18 July 1975.

"Leopards in Connecticut."  The Georgia Review 30 (Summer, 1976), 233-62.  Addresses Howard Hawks's Bringing Up Baby (1938).  A revised version appears in Pursuits of Happiness (1981), 111-32.

"Mussen wir meinen, was wir sagen?" In  Linguistik und Philosophie,  edited by Günther Grewendorf and Georg Meggle, pp.  168-219 (Frankfurt:  Athenaüm Verlag, 1974).

"More of The World Viewed."  The Georgia Review 28.4 (Winter, 1974), 571-631.  Expanded and added as an appendix to the enlarged edition of The World Viewed (1979).

"Types; Cycles as Genres" [from The World Viewed].  In Film Theory and Criticism, edited by Gerald Mast & Marshall Cohen,  pp.  359-65 (New York:  Oxford University Press, 1974).  A second edition, issued in 1979, contains additional work by Cavell.

"Ideas of Origin" [from The World Viewed].  In Film Theory and Criticism, edited by Gerald Mast & Marshall Cohen,  pp.  579-82 (New York:  Oxford University Press, 1974).  Oxford issued a second edition in 1979 containing additional material by Cavell. 

"Must We Mean What We Say?" In Philosophy and Linguistics, Controversies in Philosophy, edited by Colin Lyas, pp. 131-65 (London:  Macmillan and Co. Ltd./New York:  St. Martin's Press, 1971).  

"The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy."  In Philosophy and Linguistics, Controversies in Philosophy, edited by Colin Lyas, pp. 166-89 (London:  Macmillan and Co. Ltd./New York:  St. Martin's Press, 1971).  

"Some Reflections on the Ontology of Film."  New American Review 12 (1971), 140-59.

"Austin at Criticism."  In Symposium on J. L. Austin, International Library of Philosophy and Scientific Method, edited by K. T. Fann, pp. 59-75 (London:  Routledge & Kegan Paul [New York:  Humanities Press], 1969).

"Austin at Criticism."  In Philosophy Today No. 1, edited by Jerry H. Gill, pp. 81-101 (New York:  Macmillan Company, 1968).

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"Der Zugang zu Wittgensteins Spätphilosophie."  In Über Ludwig Wittgenstein, edited by Ulrich Steinworth, pp. 119-53 (Frankfurt am Main:  Suhrkamp Verlag, 1968).  A translation of Cavell's "The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy," The Philosophical Review 71  (January, 1962), 67-93.  Translated by Rolf-Albert Dietrich.  Also includes essays by Norman Malcolm, Peter Fredrick Strawson, and Newton Garver.

"Music Discomposed."  In  Art, Mind, and Religion  (proceedings of the April 1965, Sixth Annual Oberlin Colloquium in Philosophy), edited by W. H. Capitan and D. D. Merrill, pp.  69-97 (Pittsburgh:  University of Pittsburgh Press, 1967).  Reprinted in Must We Mean What We Say? (1969), 180-212.  Originally read as the opening paper at this symposium.  Most of sections V, VI, and VII was presented as part of a symposium at the University of California Berkeley, December 1960.  Called "Composition, Improvisation, Chance," the symposium was held at a joint meeting of the American Musicological Society, the Society for Ethnomusicology, and the College Music Society.  Accompanying this article are comments by Joseph Margolis, 98-102, Monroe C. Beardsley, 103-109, and a rejoinder by Cavell, 110-32, which was later published in Must We Mean What We Say?  as "A Matter of Meaning It," 213-37.

"Austin at Criticism."  In The Linguistic Turn,  edited by  Richard Rorty, pp. 250-60 (Chicago:  The University of Chicago Press, 1967).  Second edition, 1992.

"The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy."  In  Wittgenstein:  The Philosophical Investigations,  edited by  George Pitcher, pp. 151-85 (Garden City, NY:  Doubleday & Co., Inc., 1966).

With Alexander Sesonske.  "Logical Empiricism and Pragmatism in Ethics."  In  Pragmatic Philosophy:  An Anthology, edited by Amelie Rorty, pp. 382-95 (Garden City, NY:  Anchor Books, 1966).

"Austin at Criticism."   The Philosophical Review 74.2 (April, 1965), 204-19.  Reprinted in Must We Mean What We Say? (1969), 97-114.  Largely written while Cavell was in residence in 1962-63 at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University.

"Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy."  In Philosophy in America,  edited by Max Black, pp.  74-97 (Ithaca, NY:  Cornell University Press, 1965).  Reprinted in Must We Mean What We Say? (1969), 73-96.  A volume collecting original essays by younger American philosophers.  The first half of the essay was delivered at a meeting of the American Society for Aesthetics in October 1962.  It was largely written in 1962-63 while Cavell was in residence at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University.  

"Existentialism and Analytical Philosophy."   Daedalus:  Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 93.3 (Summer, 1964), 946-74.  Reprinted in Themes Out of School (1984), 195-234.

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"Must We Mean What We Say?"  In Ordinary Language,  edited by Vere Claiborne Chappell, pp. 75-112 (Englewood Cliffs, NJ:  Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1964).  Includes Benson Mates's essay, "On the Verification of Statements about Ordinary Language."

"The Availability of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophy."  The Philosophical Review 71  (January, 1962), 67-93.  Reprinted in Must We Mean What We Say? (1969), 44-72.

"Must We Mean What We Say?"  Inquiry 1.3 (Autumn, 1958), 172-212.  Reprinted as the first essay in Must We Mean What We Say? (1969), 1-43.  From a paper read at the Pacific Coast Division of the American Philosophical Association, 19 December 1957, for a symposium in part addressing Benson Mates's "On the Verification of Statements about Ordinary Language."

With Alexander Sesonske.  "Moral Theory, Ethical Judgments and Empiricism."  Mind 61.244 (October, 1952), 543-63.

With Alexander Sesonske.  "Logical Empiricism and Pragmatism in Ethics."  The Journal of Philosophy 48 (January 4, 1951), 5-17.Interviews & Discussions(Chronologically)

With Giovanna Borradori, "An Apology for Skepticism."  In Giovanna Barradori, The American Philosopher:  Conversations with Quine, Davidson, Putnam, Nozick, Danto, Rorty, Cavell, MacIntyre, and Kuhn , translated by Rosanna Crocitto (Chicago: Universiy of Chicago Press, 1993), 118-36.  Originally published as Conversazioni americane con W. O. Quine, D. Davidson, H. Putnam, R. Nozick, A. C. Danto, R. Rorty, S. Cavell, A. MacIntyre, Th. S. Kuhn (Gius:  Laterza & Figli, 1991).

With Richard Fleming, "The Self of Philosophy: An Interview with Stanley Cavell."  In Stanley Cavell,  Philosophical Passages: Wittgenstein, Emerson, Austin, Derrida,  Bucknell Lectures in Literary Theory 12, general editors Michael Payne and Harold Schweizer (Oxford:  Basil Blackwell, Ltd., 1995), 91-103.  Bucknell University, 6 May 1993.

Seminar on "What Did Derrida Want of Austin?"  In Stanley Cavell,  Philosophical Passages: Wittgenstein, Emerson, Austin, Derrida,  Bucknell Lectures in Literary Theory 12, general editors Michael Payne and Harold Schweizer (Oxford:  Basil Blackwell, Ltd., 1995)  Recorded 5 May 1993 at Bucknell University; text revised December 1993.

With James Conant,  "An Interview with Stanley Cavell."  In  The Senses of Stanley Cavell, edited by Richard Fleming and Michael Payne, 21-72.  Bucknell Review:  A Scholarly Journal of Letters, Arts and Sciences  32.1 (Lewisburg, PA:  Bucknell University Press [London:  Associated University Presses], 1989).  This volume is a special edition of the Bucknell Review devoted to Cavell's work.

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With Michael Payne and Richard Fleming,  "A Conversation with Stanley Cavell on Philosophy and Literature." In  The Senses of Stanley Cavell, edited by Richard Fleming and Michael Payne, 311-21.  Bucknell Review:  A Scholarly Journal of Letters, Arts and Sciences  32.1 (Lewisburg, PA:  Bucknell University Press [London:  Associated University Presses], 1989).  This volume is a special edition of the Bucknell Review devoted to Cavell's work. With Daniel Callahan, Denise Carmody, Michael Fishbane, Stephen Richard Graubard, James Gustafson, Timothy Healy (S.J.), Robert Kiely, George Lindbeck, Robert Lynn, Frank Manuel, John Padberg (S.J.),  and Theodore Sizer.  "Conference on Religion and Education."  Daedalus :  The Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 117.2 (Spring, 1988), 1-146.  From a conference discussion sponsored by Daedalus and Georgetown University.

With Leonhard Schmeiser, "How can one inherit Europe?  Stanley Cavell über Tradition und Neubeginn der amerikanischen Philosophie."  An interview in  Nach der Philosophie:  Essays von Stanley Cavell, edited by Kurt Rudolf Fischer & Ludwig Nagl, pp.  219-28 (Wien:  Verlag des Verbandes der wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaften Österreichs, 1987).   Broadcast on Österreichischen Rundfunks (Ö1) program "Dimensionen," 10 July 1986.

"Observations on Art and Science." Daedalus:  The Journal of the American academy of Arts and Sciences 115.3 (Summer, 1986), 171-77.  Under the same title, Daedalus collects remarks by Leon Cooper, Samuel Y. Edgerton, Jr., and Victor F. Weisskopf.  See also:  "Observations on Art and Science."  In Art and Science, The Daedalus Library, edited by Stephen Richard Graubard, pp. 171-77 (Lanham, MD:  University Press of America, 1986). 

"Questions and Answers."  In Romanticism and Contemporary Criticism, edited by Morris Eaves and Michael Fischer, pp. 225-39 (Ithaca:  Cornell University Press, 1986).

Recorded Lectures

"His Girl Friday."  In  Pursuits of Happiness:  A Reading of Three Hollywood Comedies.   Patten Lectures, v.1979-1980 (Bloomington:  University of Indiana, 1980).  Recorded 10 April 1980.

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"The Philadelphia Story."  In  Pursuits of Happiness:  A Reading of Three Hollywood Comedies.  Patten Lectures, v.1979-1980 (Bloomington:  University of Indiana, 1980).  Recorded 9 April  1980. 

"It Happened One Night."  In   Pursuits of Happiness:  A Reading of Three Hollywood Comedies.  Patten Lectures, v.1979-1980 (Bloomington:  University of Indiana, 1980).  Recorded 8 April  1980.

Acknowledgments:  Special thanks to  Richard Fleming.  Thanks to Associated University Presses for permission to reprint material appearing in the Bucknell Review 32.1 (1989).  Theresa Wenzke's library work at Bucknell University was invaluable to me.  Thanks to Stanley Cavell, Tom Eisele, Leland Poague, Charles Bernstein, Kurt Fischer, Ludwig Nagl, and Gordon Bearn for additional references.  I am also grateful to Linda Beard, Nancy Collins, and Holle Schneider (of the Fishburn Library at Hollins College) and to Eric Nitschke (of the Woodruff Library at Emory University) for help with DIALOG, telnet, and database searches and for assistance with interlibrary loans.  Thanks to  the Bucknell Review, Mohammed Azadpur, and Mitchell Pollack for their assistance with the first publication of the bibliography.


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