
New Books in Literary Studies Eric Hayot, "Humanist Reason: A History, an Argument, a Plan" (Columbia UP, 2021)
Dec 3, 2021
Eric Hayot, Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature and director of the Center for Humanities and Information, discusses humanist reason as a dialogic craft. He explores writing style and genre, the history and principles behind humanities’ epistemic claims, counterfactual thinking, and bold proposals to remake undergraduate curricula around thematic, engaging courses.
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Writing Voice Built From Many Traditions
- Hayot credits extensive formal writing training across journalism, fiction, and tutoring for shaping his voice.
- He studied and imitated admired writers before finding his own style.
Dialogic Definition Of Reason
- Humanist reason aims to state claims true for as many people as possible through dialogic engagement.
- Reason includes openness to being revised by others and to changing shared truths.
Reframe To Defend Epistemic Legitimacy
- Hayot insists humanists already practice a form of reason compatible with evidence and truth-seeking.
- Re-describing that practice can bolster the humanities' epistemic legitimacy.








