Over de Auteur
Mary Poovey is the Samuel Rudin University Professor in the Humanities and professor of English at New York University
Werken van Mary Poovey
A History of the Modern Fact: Problems of Knowledge in the Sciences of Wealth and Society (1998) 113 exemplaren
The Proper Lady and the Woman Writer: Ideology as Style in the Works of Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Shelley, and Jane… (1984) 51 exemplaren
Genres of the Credit Economy: Mediating Value in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Britain (2008) 43 exemplaren
"Ideology and 'The Mysteries of Udolpho'" 1 exemplaar
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Chapter 1 begins by reflecting on what exactly we mean by a fact. A fact is usually thought of as a particular, a particular that in turn needs to be understood within the larger context or system of which it is a part. That said, there have been different ways of approaching this question of the fact. The ancient, Aristotelian way was to look upon facts as things that confirmed the order of things, as "commonplaces." This way of looking at things is overturned in the seventeenth century by Francis Bacon, who reverses Aristotle's perspective by asking how we account for those facts that don't fit into the commonplace, that disrupt the system.
Poovey locates Bacon's revolutionary new perspective within a larger discourse that owes an explicit debt to Bruno Latour's [b:We Have Never Been Modern|134569|We Have Never Been Modern|Bruno Latour|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1348835649l/134569._SY75_.jpg|3058288]. Latour argues that early thinkers of modernity, from Bacon to Boyle to Hobbes, engaged in a false separation of nature and society. On one side, there is the objective reality, on the other, the discourse that describes it. This division makes possible a theoretical separation between "objective" or "scientific" description of facts, and their political interpretation.
Poovey's task, then, is to question and interrogate this separation, to reveal the extent to which knowledge and interpretation, fact and rhetoric are inextricably intertwined with each other. The emphasis on numbers and statistics, which is grounded in a denial of rhetoric in favor of "plain speaking" and "hard facts," is just one strategy among many that conceals the reality that numbers are also selective and interpretive. To prove this point, Poovey signals her intention of looking at the historical tools that were developed to promote the illusion of the modern fact, beginning with the phenomenon of double-entry book-keeping.… (meer)