An Introduction to Literature, Criticism and Theory /
Andrew Bennett and Nicholas Royle.
- 2nd ed.
- Harlow : Prentice Hall, 1999.
- viii, 304 p. ; 22 cm.
Bibliography p. 218-229.
*The Beginning*Readers and Reading*The Author*The Text and the World*The Uncanny*Narrative*Character*Voice*Figures and Tropes*Laughter*The Tragic*History*Me*Sexual Difference*God*Ideology*Desire*Suspense*Racial Difference*The Performative*Secrets*The Postmodern*Pleasure*Queer*Ghosts*The Colony*Monuments*The End.
The new edition has been thoroughly revised but retains the same winning characteristics of its predecessor: presenting the key critical concepts in literary studies today, avoiding the jargonistic, abstract nature of much 'theory'. The authors then apply these concepts through readings of a range of literary texts from Chaucer to Achebe and from Milton to Morrison.*explores emerging areas of literary studies - postcolonial theory, queer theory including a reading of works by writers including F. Scott Fitzgerald and Jeanette Winterson*considers works by T.S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens and Toni Morrison, looking at questions of influence, intertextuality and the ghostly*offers a reading of Kafka's 'The Penal Colony', alongside the critical work of Edward Said, Homi Bhabha, Robert Young and Gayatri Spivak*examines current debates about the canon
0130109142
Criticism. Literature--History and criticism--Theory, etc.