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Studying Literature: The Essential Companion [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 424 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 238x161x38 mm, weight: 749 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Jun-2001
  • Leidėjas: Hodder Arnold
  • ISBN-10: 0340759453
  • ISBN-13: 9780340759455
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 424 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 238x161x38 mm, weight: 749 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Jun-2001
  • Leidėjas: Hodder Arnold
  • ISBN-10: 0340759453
  • ISBN-13: 9780340759455
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Designed to accompany students throughout the whole of their English degree, this is a one-stop reference for all the information they need, both on their subject and on the best way to go about studying it. Combining a concise glossary of critical terms and theories, a guide to literary theorists, and a study skills guide in one, the companion is written with an awareness of the needs of students today, and seeks to blend academic rigour with practical information. The book is split into 5 main sections: A study guide takes the student through reading a text, preparing for courses, getting the most out of seminars and lectures, making presentations, finding and using secondary material, writing essays, and taking exams. Section 2 provides a guide to the use of electronic media - offering advice on finding information online, downloading texts and criticism, joining web and email discussion groups, and using online bibliographies. Section 3 is an introduction to literary theories and approaches. There is also a glossary of terms and a bibliographical section containing critical profiles of the key modern theorists.
Introduction
Introducing your Companion
1(1)
Using the Companion
2(1)
Cross-referencing
2(5)
Guide to Studying Literature At University
Introduction
7(2)
Who is this guide for?
7(1)
Is such a guide really necessary?
7(1)
`Literary', `primary', `secondary': a note on terminology
8(1)
Getting organized
9(11)
Your degree scheme
9(1)
Preparing for courses
10(1)
Getting the most from lectures, seminars and tutorials
11(3)
Using the library
14(5)
Using computers
19(1)
Reading literary texts
20(43)
Reading and studying: general points
21(4)
Reading prose fiction: novels, novellas and short stories
25(11)
Reading drama
36(13)
Reading poetry
49(14)
Literary criticism
63(5)
What is literary criticism?
63(2)
How to find relevant criticism
65(2)
Using criticism
67(1)
Writing essays
68(25)
Analyzing the question
69(3)
Formulating and structuring an argument
72(2)
Applying literary theory in essays
74(5)
Writing
79(6)
Guidelines on presentation/style
85(4)
Plagiarism and how to avoid it
89(2)
Making a presentation
91(2)
Exams
93(8)
Preparation and revision
93(3)
Taking exams
96(5)
Guide to the Use of Electronic Media
Some introductory comments
101(1)
Electronic media: opening definitions
102(2)
Finding primary electronic information
104(3)
Issues of reliability
107(3)
Assessing authority and reliability
108(2)
Downloading literary texts
110(1)
Reading in the electronic age
111(1)
Searching and analyzing electronic texts
112(1)
Browsing the Web
113(3)
Evaluating secondary sources
116(2)
Secondary sources
118(7)
Bibliographies
118(2)
Periodicals
120(1)
Web sites
121(1)
Listservs (e-mail discussion groups)
121(3)
Newsgroups
124(1)
Revising and editing electronically
125(1)
Documenting electronic media
126(5)
Safety measures
131(4)
Theories and Approaches
Why theory?
135(2)
Moliere's Monsieur Jourdain
136(1)
Reinventing the wheel
136(1)
The theoretical object
137(1)
Types of theory
138(4)
Descriptive or prescriptive?
138(1)
Literature-specific?
139(1)
Butcher or biologist?
139(1)
School or theory?
140(1)
Chosen or thrust-upon?
141(1)
Theory and method
142(1)
A note on our groupings
143(1)
Formalisms
143(9)
Russian Formalism
144(2)
Prague School
146(2)
New Criticism
148(4)
The Hermeneutic tradition
152(10)
Hermeneutics
152(4)
Phenomenology
156(2)
Reception theory
158(1)
Reader-response criticism
159(3)
Structuralism and its progeny
162(14)
Structuralism
163(2)
Semiology/semiotics
165(3)
Narratology
168(1)
Post-structuralism
169(1)
Deconstruction
170(3)
Pragmatics and the reaction against structuralism
173(1)
Speech-act theory
174(2)
Psychological and psychoanalytic theories
176(6)
Psychoanalytic criticism
177(3)
Archetypal criticism
180(2)
`Isms'
182(19)
Marxist theory and criticism
184(2)
Frankfurt School
186(1)
New Historicism and cultural materialism
186(5)
Postcolonialism
191(1)
Feminism
191(4)
Queer theory
195(6)
Glossary of Literary and Theoretical Terms
201(199)
Guide to Theorists
Mikhail Bakhtin
313(2)
Roland Barthes
315(2)
Simone de Beauvoir
317(1)
Walter Benjamin
318(1)
Homi K. Bhabha
319(2)
Harold Bloom
321(2)
Bertolt Brecht
323(1)
Helene Cixous
324(2)
Jacques Derrida
326(2)
Terry Eagleton
328(1)
Umberto Eco
329(2)
T.S. Eliot
331(2)
William Empson
333(1)
Stanley Fish
334(2)
Michel Foucault
336(3)
Northrop Frye
339(1)
Henry Louis Gates, Jr
340(2)
Gerard Genette
342(1)
Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar
343(1)
Lucien Goldmann
344(2)
Stephen Jay Greenblatt
346(3)
E.D. Hirsch Jr
349(2)
bell hooks
351(1)
Luce Irigaray
352(2)
Wolfgang Iser
354(2)
Roman Jakobson
356(2)
Fredric Jameson
358(2)
Julia Kristeva
360(2)
Jacques Lacan
362(2)
F.R. Leavis
364(3)
Georg Lukacs
367(2)
Jean-Francois Lyotard
369(2)
Jerome McGann
371(1)
Paul de Man
372(2)
J. Hillis Miller
374(2)
Kate Millett
376(2)
Vladimir Propp
378(1)
I.A. Richards
379(2)
Paul Ricoeur
381(1)
Edward Said
382(2)
Ferdinand de Saussure
384(1)
Viktor Shklovsky
385(2)
Elaine Showalter
387(1)
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
388(3)
Tzvetan Todorov
391(2)
Rene Wellek
393(1)
Raymond Williams
394(3)
Virginia Woolf
397(3)
Bibliography 400