Sunday, October 5, 2008

Everyday Critique


"Critique implies possibilities, and possibilities as yet unfulfilled. It is the task of critique to demonstrate what these possibilities and this lack of fulfilment are" (Henri Lefebvre, page 26). This quote caught my attention because I believe human beings spend a lot of their everyday lives critiquing. Life is an evaluation. A process of creating ideas and molding oneself and/or others to view the world through a particular lens. Is an opinion a critique? Do our critiques say a lot about us, or the thing that we are critiquing? What would a world void of criticism be like? Who determines our possibilities and how we fulfill them? I looked up critique in the dictionary (online) and I found a strange note included under the definition:
 
Usage NoteCritique has been used as a verb meaning "to review or discuss critically" since the 18th century, but lately this usage has gained much wider currency, in part because the verb criticize, once neutral between praise and censure, is now mainly used in a negative sense. But this use of critique is still regarded by many as pretentious jargon, although resistance appears to be weakening. In our 1997 ballot, 41 percent of the Usage Panel rejected the sentence As mock inquisitors grill him, top aides take notes and critique the answers with the President afterward. Ten years earlier, 69 percent disapproved of this same sentence. Resistance is still high when a person is critiqued: 60 percent of the Usage Panel rejects its use in the sentence Students are taught how to do a business plan and then are critiqued on it.Thus, it may be preferable to avoid this word. There is no exact synonym, but in most contexts one can usually substitute go over, review, or analyze. · Note, however, that critique is widely accepted as a noun in a neutral context; 86 percent of the Panel approved of its use in the sentence The committee gave the report a thorough critique and found it both informed and intelligent.

So "critique" is part of our everyday lives as human beings and we do it on a regular basis, but why do we disapprove so much when we are the ones being critiqued? Perhaps resistance to critique is a struggle for power and perceived truth.

1 comment:

Joe Milutis said...

critique is diff from opinion in that opinion implies a fixed position (as in "well that's just my opinion") rather than something that allows for a transformation.