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Article
Interpretation's Contrapuntal Pathways: Addams and the Averbuch Affair
Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society
  • Marilyn Fischer, University of Dayton
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2011
Abstract

In March 1908 the Chicago Police Chief shot Lazarus Averbuch, a young, Russian Jewish immigrant, claiming self-defense against an anarchist plot. Jane Addams refused to join the public's outcry of support for their chief, declaring that she had the obligation to interpret rather than denounce the incident. Her analysis of Averbuch's killing, given in her essay, ““The Chicago Settlements and Social Unrest,”” provides a focal point for seeing how interpretation functions as a unifying theoretical category for Addams, bringing together her activism, her style of writing, and her philosophy of social change. Addams's conception of interpretation is multi-faceted and dynamic; the interweaving lines of contrapuntal music give a fitting metaphor. I analyze the essay's presentation of interpretation in terms of three contrapuntal voice-lines: as dramatization, as mediation-advocacy, and as reconstruction.

Inclusive pages
482-506
ISBN/ISSN
0009-1774
Document Version
Published Version
Comments

This document is provided for download in compliance with the publisher's policy on self-archiving. Permission documentation is on file.

Publisher
Indiana University Press
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Citation Information
Marilyn Fischer. "Interpretation's Contrapuntal Pathways: Addams and the Averbuch Affair" Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society Vol. 47 Iss. 4 (2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/marilyn_fischer/17/