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8 - ‘In the daylight forever?’: language and silence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Graham Ward
Affiliation:
Professor of Contextual Theology and Ethics University of Manchester
Oliver Davies
Affiliation:
University of Wales, Lampeter
Denys Turner
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The title of this chapter deliberately echoes the title of an early volume by George Steiner, also called Language and Silence. There is no essay in the volume with that title, but there are several essays devoted to various forms of association between language and silence; essays which witness to the varieties of silence. In ‘Retreat from the Word’, for example, Steiner treats the crisis in literacy in the middle years of the twentieth century. It is a crisis in which language and reality have become divorced, where, in a world in which mathematics map the profundities of what is real, the world of words has shrunk. In the ‘retreat from the authority and range of verbal language’ we are heading towards a tawdry banality, a silence into which civilisation will slide and perish. In ‘Night Words’ he treats this increasing banality with respect to the ‘new pornographers’ who parade the vital privacies of sexual experience, taking away the words that were spoken in the night to shout them from midmorning rooftops. In the commercialisation of sex, Steiner observes, lies the kenosis of the Word (capital letter), the impoverishment of Logos itself. And in a selection of six essays, organised under the heading ‘Language out of Darkness’, Steiner treats what is evidently, as for Adorno, the root of the traumatising autism: the death-camps and the ethnic cleansing of Nazi Germany. The silence grows palpable: ‘The language will no longer grow and freshen.

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Chapter
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Silence and the Word
Negative Theology and Incarnation
, pp. 159 - 184
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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