Literary Theory : A Beginner's Guide
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TextSeries: Oneworld beginners' guidesPublication details: Oxford, New York : Oneworld, 2011. Edition: 1st South Asian edDescription: 227 p. : 20 cmISBN: 978-1-85168-730-5 (pbk.)Subject(s): Criticism | Criticism, interpretation, etc | Literature History and criticism Theory, etcDDC classification: TRRC 801.95 CON | TRRC 801.950904 CON Summary: ""Excellent. Probably the best introductory guide to literary theory I've seen." Ian Buchanan-Professor of Critical and Cultural Theory, Cardiff University" ""Profoundly reliable as well as inviting, playful, and inventive." Sarah Wood-Lecturer in English, University of Kent" ""Lucid, very readable, and authoritative." Tim Clark-Professor of English, Durham University" "What is literature? How do we find meaning in it? And why does it matter? For centuries, we have elaborated theories to provide answers to fundamental questions about the nature and role of literary texts. But as literary theory increasingly draws on ideas from other disciplines, it risks losing sight of what is at its very core: literature and our experience of it." "Rescuing the subject from dry abstractions, and focusing on the real issues that emerge when we read, Clare Connors examines works by a variety of noteworthy authors to offer a clear explanation of literary theory firmly anchored in literature itself. From analysing the sources of pleasure in Proulx's Brokeback Mountain to investigating the ideology in Dickens's Hard Times, this fresh introduction demonstrates the compelling insights literary theory can offer, and reveals how enjoyable it is to think about what we read."
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Teaching & Research Resource Centre - 3 - Social Sciences | TRRC 801.95 CON (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | M-48257 | |
Book
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Teaching & Research Resource Centre - 3 - Social Sciences | TRRC 801.950904 CON (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | M-41670 |
Includes Bibliographical References and Index.
""Excellent. Probably the best introductory guide to literary theory I've seen." Ian Buchanan-Professor of Critical and Cultural Theory, Cardiff University" ""Profoundly reliable as well as inviting, playful, and inventive." Sarah Wood-Lecturer in English, University of Kent" ""Lucid, very readable, and authoritative." Tim Clark-Professor of English, Durham University" "What is literature? How do we find meaning in it? And why does it matter? For centuries, we have elaborated theories to provide answers to fundamental questions about the nature and role of literary texts. But as literary theory increasingly draws on ideas from other disciplines, it risks losing sight of what is at its very core: literature and our experience of it." "Rescuing the subject from dry abstractions, and focusing on the real issues that emerge when we read, Clare Connors examines works by a variety of noteworthy authors to offer a clear explanation of literary theory firmly anchored in literature itself. From analysing the sources of pleasure in Proulx's Brokeback Mountain to investigating the ideology in Dickens's Hard Times, this fresh introduction demonstrates the compelling insights literary theory can offer, and reveals how enjoyable it is to think about what we read."

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