Literary Criticism: An Introduction to Theory and PracticePrentice Hall, 2003 - 319 pagina's The fourth edition of the bestselling Literary Criticism: An Introduction to Theory and Practice showcases various schools of 20th century criticism in historical and philosophical contexts. New features include: - A new chapter on queer theory. - Every chapter has been revised with new introductions with appropriate new critical vocabulary, critical terms, further readings sections, and web sites. - New student essays - Structuralism and Deconstruction have been combined into one section to make the material clearer and more streamlined. - The addition of Plotinus, Giovanni Boccaccio, Joseph Addison, Percy Pysshe Shelley, and Mikhail Bakhtin. Pick a Penguin Program* We offer select Penguin Putnam titles at a substantial discount to your students when you request a special package of one or more Penguin titles with this text. Please contact your local Prentice Hall Sales Representative for more information. |
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Pagina 68
... text plays , denying its objective existence . Meaning , Bleich argues , does not reside in the text but is developed when the reader works in cooperation with other readers to achieve the text's collective meaning ( what Bleich calls ...
... text plays , denying its objective existence . Meaning , Bleich argues , does not reside in the text but is developed when the reader works in cooperation with other readers to achieve the text's collective meaning ( what Bleich calls ...
Pagina 89
... text but already existing in the mind of the reader will determine for that partic- ular reader the text's interpretation . No matter what its methodology , structuralism emphasizes form and structure , not the actual content of a text ...
... text but already existing in the mind of the reader will determine for that partic- ular reader the text's interpretation . No matter what its methodology , structuralism emphasizes form and structure , not the actual content of a text ...
Pagina 110
... texts cannot possess meaning . Since all meaning and knowledge is now based on differences , no text can simply mean one thing . Texts become intertextual . The meaning of a text cannot be ascertained by examining only that particular text ...
... texts cannot possess meaning . Since all meaning and knowledge is now based on differences , no text can simply mean one thing . Texts become intertextual . The meaning of a text cannot be ascertained by examining only that particular text ...
Inhoudsopgave
Defining Criticism Theory and Literature | 1 |
A Historical Survey of Literary Criticism | 16 |
New Criticism | 37 |
Copyright | |
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According actual American analysis applied approach asserts assumptions base become begins believe binary called complex concept concerns consciousness create cultural deconstruction define Derrida desires develop discourse discover dominant dream elements English essay examining example exists experiences female feminist Freud hand human ideas images individual interpretation John language linguistics literary criticism literary theory literature live looked male Marxist meaning methodology mind Mitty nature object operations particular philosophical pleasure principle poem Poetics poetry political position postcolonial practical present Press principles provides psyche psychoanalytic questions reader reading reality refers relationship responses rules Saussure says schools shapes signified social society sound speech story structure symbol term text's thinking thought tion truth unconscious understanding University values various voice women writing York