
Originally Posted by
Morrisonhotel
I have just shown you your sentiments in relation to the argument. Note the section where you state that her beliefs that homosexuality is immoral is irrelevant to this discussion - and, furthermore, the implication that politics are as well. By maintaining that one cannot judge how 'good' a writer on these grounds, you, effectively, get rid of all this form of criticism - and implicitly mean that political beliefs are not a way one can judge the merit of a writer (after all, if Rand cannot be subjected to the political basis of critique as to whether she is a good writer or not then no writer can).You're clearly now trying to save face.
I know textual semiotics extremely well, thank you very much - comes with how deeply-ground the teaching of English Lit. in linguistic theory is at my university. I never once proclaimed I had such a knowledge of Saussure - I merely stated his position as such an important theorist. de Man and Derrida, on the other hand, I have exceptionally good knowledge of their works.
It is not irrelevant. I have stated time and time and time again that the political beliefs of a writer are a perfectly valid form of critiqueing whether their work is good or not. The example of the change in opinion towards de Man's work shows this perfectly well - after all, he went from being an important and good critic to being slated as a bad one for, essentially, being a Nazi sympathiser (i.e. the political beliefs he espoused changed people's opinions on his merit as a critic and a writer). How can I make that more explicit? Should I draw the deductions in big letters somewhere? Well done, you've managed to use Google to find out so much about him. The difference between Locke and de Man is that whilst de Man is dead as well, his work is profoundly more influential at this precise moment in time on all manner of things. Locke's work has been challenged time and time again - as a consequence, it is almost inconsequential what his views would be on Rand.
Again, MASH has hardly had a profound influence on so many areas of intellectualism as de Man's work. I repeat my last sentiments when I state that I'll give him the time of day when he has influenced as many people as de Man. You just finished saying how famous he is, yet you then back-track and say that screenwriters aren't well known. Which is it? A look on wiki and IMDB brings up almost nothing (certainly nothing of artistic value or of particular fame)- he can't be that famous or influential. Also, he's actually dead (see IMDB.com). Also, you had to hide the first name of him - why do that if he is famous as "Bill Canon" - note: not Doran William Cannon? de Man's work has had profound influence on modern literature - you'd be hard pushed to find any theorist or writer who has a more influential role. How exactly is DWC's work any more real life than de Man's theories? That doesn't even make sense - MASH is not real-life. Where as de Man's work looked at, among other things, the interaction between people - what is more real life than one person talking to another, after all.
How exactly is your last post the same as mine? I've eruditely argued. You've done nothing but respond with, well, nothing.