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A Reader's Guide to Contemporary Literary Theory (5th Edition) PDF

314 Pages·2005·3.56 MB·english
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0582894107_cvr 22/2/05 2:21 PM Page 1 A Reader’s Guide to Contemporary Literary Theory Fifth edition FA if tR RAMAN SELDEN he ea PETER WIDDOWSON dd PETER BROOKER itioer’s n G The best of the many guides to literary theory that are currently available. Widdowson u and Brooker chart a clear and comprehensively documented path through the full range id e of what is best in contemporary literary theory...indispensable for all students of literature t …An impressive achievement! o C John Drakakis, Stirling University o n This Guide is as stimulating and instructive an introduction to [literary theory] as any reader te might wish for. m p John Kenny, Centre for the Study of Human Settlement and Historical Change, o National University of Ireland, Galway ra r y L A Reader’s Guide to Contemporary Literary Theoryis a classic introduction to the ever-evolving it field of modern literary theory, now expanded and updated in its fifth edition. This book presents e r the full range of positions and movements in contemporary literary theory. It organises the a r theories into clearly defined sections and presents them in an accessible and lucid style. y Students are introduced, through succinct but incisive expositions, to New Criticism, Reader- T h Response Theory, Marxist Criticism, Structuralism, Post-Structuralism, Post-Modernism and e Feminism, as well as to Cultural Materialism and New Historicism, Postcolonialism and Gay, o r Lesbian and Queer Theory. y This new edition also considers the ‘New Aestheticism’ and engages with the idea of ‘Post-Theory’. This comprehensive book also contains extensively revised Further Reading lists, including web and electronic resources, and two appendices which recommend glossaries of key theoretical and critical terms and relevant journals. S E Raman Seldenis late Professor of English at the University of Sunderland. L D E N Peter Widdowsonis Professor of Literary Studies at the University of Gloucestershire. His most , W A Reader’s Guide to Contemporary recent books include: Literature(1999); The Palgrave Guide to English Literature and its Contexts ID 1500–2000(2004) and Graham Swift(2005). D O Literary Theory W Peter Brookeris Professor of Literary and Cultural Studies at the University of Nottingham. He is S the author most recently of Modernity and Metropolis. Literature, Film and Urban Formations O N (2002); Bohemia in London. The Social Scene of Early Modernism(2004); and A Glossary of Cultural Theory (second edition, 2002). He is co-editor of Geographies of Modernism (2005) and , BR Fifth edition co-founder of ‘The Modernist Magazines Project’. O O K E R RAMAN SELDEN PETER WIDDOWSON Cover image: Norwich, 1999 by Sir Howard Hodgkin © Howard Hodgkin PETER BROOKER Digital Image © Tate, London 2005 www.pearson-books.com ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page i A Reader’s Guide to Contemporary Literary Theory ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page ii ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page iii A Reader’s Guide to Contemporary Literary Theory FIFTH EDITION Raman Selden Peter Widdowson Peter Brooker ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page iv PEARSON EDUCATION LIMITED Edinburgh Gate Harlow CM20 2JE United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)1279 623623 Fax: +44 (0)1279 431059 Website: www.pearsoned.co.uk Fifth edition published in Great Britain in 2005 © Prentice Hall Europe 1985, 1997 © Pearson Education Limited 2005 The rights of Raman Selden, Peter Widdowson and Peter Brooker to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. ISBN: 978-0-582-89410-5 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A CIP catalogue record for this book can be obtained from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Selden, Raman. A reader’s guide to contemporary literary theory / Raman Selden, Peter Widdowson, Peter Brooker.— 5th ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-582-89410-7 (pbk.) 1. Criticism—History—20th century. I. Widdowson, Peter. II. Brooker, Peter. III. Title. PN94.S45 2005 801'.95'0904—dc22 2004063377 All rights reserved; no par t of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the Publishers or a licence permitting restricted copying in the United Kingdom issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, Saffron House, 6-10 Kirby Street, London EC1N 8TS. This book may not be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise disposed of by way of trade in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published, without the prior consent of the Publishers. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 09 08 07 Set in 9/13.5pt Stone Serif by 35 Printed and bound in Malaysia, PJB The Publishers’ policy is to use paper manufactured from sustainable forests. ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page v In memory of Raman Selden, as always. ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page vi ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page vii Contents Preface to the Fifth Edition ix Introduction 1 1 New Criticism, moral formalism and F. R. Leavis 15 Origins: Eliot, Richards, Empson 15 The American New Critics 18 Moral formalism: F. R. Leavis 23 2 Russian formalism and the Bakhtin School 29 Shklovsky, Mukaˇrovsky´, Jakobson 30 The Bakhtin School 39 3 Reader-oriented theories 45 Phenomenology: Husserl, Heidegger, Gadamer 49 Hans Robert Jauss and Wolfgang Iser 50 Fish, Riffaterre, Bleich 55 4 Structur alist theories 62 The linguistic background 63 Structuralist narratology 67 Metaphor and metonymy 72 Structuralist poetics 75 5 Marxist theories 82 Soviet Socialist Realism 84 Lukács and Brecht 86 The Frankfurt School and After: Adorno and Benjamin 91 ‘Structuralist’ Marxism: Goldmann, Althusser, Macherey 95 ‘New Left’ Marxism: Williams, Eagleton, Jameson 99 ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page viii viii CONTENTS 6 Feminist theories 115 First-wave feminist criticism: Woolf and de Beauvoir 117 Second-wave feminist criticism 120 Kate Millett: sexual politics 123 Marxist feminism 125 Elaine Showalter: gynocriticism 126 French feminism: Kristeva, Cixous, Irigaray 129 7 Poststructuralist theories 144 Roland Barthes 148 Psychoanalytic theories: 153 Jacques Lacan 156 Julia Kristeva 161 Deleuze and Guattari 162 Deconstruction: Jacques Derrida 164 American deconstruction 171 Michel Foucault 178 New Historicism and Cultural Materialism 180 8 Postmodernist theories 197 Jean Baudrillard 200 Jean-François Lyotard 203 Postmodernism and Marxism 206 Postmodern feminisms 209 9 Postcolonialist theories 218 Edward Said 220 Gayatri C hakravorty Spivak 223 Homi K. Bhabha 226 Race and ethnicity 229 10 Gay, lesbian and queer theories 243 Gay theory and criticism 244 Lesbian feminist theory and criticism 247 Queer theory and criticism 252 Conclusion: Post-Theory 267 Appendix 1: Recommended glossaries of theoretical and critical terms and concepts 280 Appendix 2: Literary, critical and cultural theory journals 282 Index of names, titles and topics 283 ARG_A01.qxd 9/20/07 10:44 AM Page ix Preface to the Fifth Edition R aman Selden’s original A Reader’s Guide to Contemporary Literary Theory(1985) now appears in a new fifth edition. Some little while after revising the second edition in 1989, Raman prematurely and tragically died of a brain tumour. He was much loved and highly respected – not least for the remarkable achievement of producing a short, clear, informative and unpolemical volume on a diverse and difficult subject. A third edition appeared in 1993, brought up-to-date by Peter Widdowson, and in 1997 he was joined by Peter Brooker in an extensive reworking of the fourth edition (debts to other advisers who assisted them on those occasions are acknowledged in previous Prefaces). Now, in 2005, and as witness to its continuing success and popularity, the moment for further revision of A Reader’s Guide has arrived once more. Twenty years is a long time in contemporary literary theory, and the terrain, not surprisingly, has undergone substantial change since Raman Selden first traversed it. As early as the third edition, it was noted that, in the nature of things, the volume was beginning to have two rather more clearly identifiable functions than it had when the project was initiated. The earlier chapters were taking on a historical cast in outlining movements from which newer developments had received their impetus but had then superseded, while the later ones attempted to take stock of precisely those newer developments, to mark out the coordinates of where we live and practise theory and criticism now. This tendency was strengthened in the reordering and restructuring of the fourth edition, and the present version continues to reflect it, so that the last five chapters – including a new con- cluding one on what it might mean to be ‘Post-Theory’ – now comprise half the book. The Introduction reflects, amongst other things, on the issues which lie behind the current revisions, and the reading lists have, of course, again been extensively updated.

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