Critical theorists in our time sought foundations of knowledge because
they knew there were none to be found, and critical scepticism became a
convenient way of burying evidence and saving face. By now, however,
no-one is interested, the audience has gone home, and the case for
studying literature needs to begin again. It cannot start too soon. In
Take Back the Past, George Watson considers the reasons for the apparent
failure of the previous centuryis critics to find the theoretical
foundations of critical judgement. He asks why is it more fashionable to
look knowing than to know, and cites political and historical reasons
for this lapse in knowledge and critical thinking. In this new study, a
worthy addition to his work on the subject, Watson contemplates the
collapse of socialism in the late 20th Century and how it lead to the
denial of knowledge and the general degeneration of literary thought.
'My object here' - he tells the reader - 'is to find a way back to a
sense of a unity of knowledge and the objectivity of judgement: to
recover a radical purpose of literature.'