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Formalist Criticism and Reader-Response Theory [Minkštas viršelis]

3.55/5 (21 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 268 g, 208 p., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Serija: Transitions
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-May-2002
  • Leidėjas: Red Globe Press
  • ISBN-10: 033376532X
  • ISBN-13: 9780333765326
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 268 g, 208 p., 1 Paperback / softback
  • Serija: Transitions
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-May-2002
  • Leidėjas: Red Globe Press
  • ISBN-10: 033376532X
  • ISBN-13: 9780333765326
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
This invaluable guide by Todd F. Davis and Kenneth Womack offers an accessible introduction to two important movements in the history of twentieth-century literary theory. A complementary text to the Palgrave volume Postmodern Narrative Theory by Mark Currie, this new title addresses a host of theoretical concerns, as well as each field's principal figures and interpretive modes. As with other books in the Transitions series, Formalist Criticism and Reader-response Theory includes readings of a range of widely-studied texts, including Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, and F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, among others.

Transitions critically explores movements in literary theory. Guiding the reader through the poetics and politics of interpretative paradigms and schools of thought, Transitions helps direct the student's own acts of critical analysis. As well as transforming the critical developments of the past by interpreting them from the perspective of the present day, each study enacts transitional readings of a number of well-known literary texts.

Recenzijos

'Formalist Criticism and Reader-Response Theory provides a suggestive way of engaging with modern criticism...Davis and Womack have their favorites - Northrop Frye among them - but they don't 'play favorites'. They hold the ring judiciously and justly. This is a notable achievement, in contexts of such ferocity. And then every few chapters they step forward and do their own reading, regardless of methodic nicety. Or rather: they employ the difficult method that T. S. Eliot recommended, that of being very intelligent.' - Denis Donoghue, Henry James Professor in English and American Letters, New York University 'When criticism made its 'turn to history', formalists were despised for their supposed suppression and belittlement of context, politics and history...This book, then, represents the welcome return of the formalist repressed, helping us to see that formalism and historicism are not enemies: on the contrary, they need each other, and we can't have a truly interesting and vital literary studies if we don't have both. The arrangement of the book is clarity itself...Its language is clear, engaged, and direct, and the authors are willing to be forceful and outspoken when the topic demands it.' - Peter Barry, Reader in English, University of Wales, Aberystwyth 'A valuable tool for undergraduate and graduate students.' - W.F. Williams, Choice

Daugiau informacijos

'Formalist Criticism and Reader-Response Theory provides a suggestive way of engaging with modern criticism...Davis and Womack have their favorites - Northrop Frye among them - but they don't 'play favorites'. They hold the ring judiciously and justly. This is a notable achievement, in contexts of such ferocity. And then every few chapters they step forward and do their own reading, regardless of methodic nicety. Or rather: they employ the difficult method that T. S. Eliot recommended, that of being very intelligent.' - Denis Donoghue, Henry James Professor in English and American Letters, New York University 'When criticism made its 'turn to history', formalists were despised for their supposed suppression and belittlement of context, politics and history...This book, then, represents the welcome return of the formalist repressed, helping us to see that formalism and historicism are not enemies: on the contrary, they need each other, and we can't have a truly interesting and vital literary studies if we don't have both. The arrangement of the book is clarity itself...Its language is clear, engaged, and direct, and the authors are willing to be forceful and outspoken when the topic demands it.' - Peter Barry, Reader in English, University of Wales, Aberystwyth 'A valuable tool for undergraduate and graduate students.' - W.F. Williams, Choice
General Editor's Preface viii
Acknowledgements x
Introduction: Moving beyond the Politics of Interpretation 1(10)
Part I Formalist Criticism and Reader-Response Theory: A Critical Introduction 11(80)
Twentieth-Century Formalism: Convergence and Divergence
13(26)
Separate yet human: Humanism and formalist conventions
17(5)
Moving from theory to practice: The legacy of I. A. Richards and Cleanth Brooks
22(4)
Another way of knowing: Formalism as literary discourse
26(2)
The limits of formalism: Universalism, eclecticism, and morality in the work of F. R. Leavis and Kenneth Burke
28(5)
The evolution of formalism: The case of Northrop Frye
33(3)
Formalist concerns in the present
36(3)
Russian Formalism, Mikhail Bakhtin, Heteroglossia, and Carnival
39(12)
Signs, signifiers, and the Prague Linguistic Circle
44(3)
Bakhtin and the narratological revolution
47(4)
Reader-Response Theory, the Theoretical Project, and Identity Politics
51(29)
Transactional reading in the theories of Louise M. Rosenblatt and Wayne C. Booth
53(4)
Reader-response theory, narratology, and the structuralist imperative
57(6)
A subjectivist feast: Reader-response theory and psychological criticism
63(10)
Searching for the gendered self: Reader-response theory and feminist criticism
73(7)
Stanley Fish, Self-Consuming Artifacts, and the Professionalization of Literary Studies
80(11)
`Meaning as an event': The evolution of Stanley Fish's reader-response theory
82(4)
`Reading' critical theory, professionalization, and the lingering problem of intentionality
86(5)
Part II Readings in Formalist Criticism and Reader-Response Theory 91(63)
A: Formalist Critical Readings
Travelling through the Valley of Ashes: Symbolic Unity in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby
93(14)
Nick Carraway's narrative of hope and wonder
96(7)
The Great Gatsby, the romantic tradition, and narrative transcendence
103(4)
Charlotte Bronte and Frye's Secular Scripture: The Structure of Romance in Jane Eyre
107(16)
Romance and its contexts: The archetypal play of form and feeling
107(5)
Romantic expectations: Heroes, heroines, and their quests
112(5)
Descent and ascent: The structural movements of Jane and Rochester
117(6)
B: Reader-Response Critical Readings
`Telle us som myrie tale, by youre fey!': Exploring the Reading Transaction and Narrative Structure in Chaucer's Clerk's Tale and Troilus and Criseyde
123(13)
Chaucer, narrative discourse, and the Clerk's Tale
124(5)
Chaucer and the transactional possibilities of literary parody
129(7)
Addressing Horizons of Readerly Expectation in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Ford Madox Ford's The Good Soldier, or, How to Put the `Reader' in `Reader Response'
136(18)
Engendering reader-response through Conrad's and Ford's literary impressionism
138(2)
Marlow's journey to the ethical void
140(5)
Dowell's narrative circumlocution and the ethics of storytelling
145(9)
Conclusion: Beyond Formalist Criticism and Reader-Response Theory 154(3)
Notes 157(12)
Annotated Bibliography 169(8)
Works Cited 177(11)
Index 188


TODD F. DAVIS is Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of English at Goshen College, Indiana.

KENNETH WOMACK is Assistant Professor of English at the Pennsylvania State University's Altoona College.