Literary Theory Toolkit
A Compendium of Concepts and Methods
Häftad, Engelska, 2011
Av Herman Rapaport, USA) Rapaport, Herman (Wake Forest University, Rapaport
409 kr
Finns i fler format (1)
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2011-04-18
- Mått154 x 230 x 16 mm
- Vikt454 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor320
- FörlagJohn Wiley and Sons Ltd
- ISBN9781405170475
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Herman Rapaport is Reynolds Professor of English, Wake Forest University, North Carolina, USA. He has published several books on aspects of Jacques Derrida's work and is currently doing research in the Derrida archives for a forthcoming project Archival Derrida.
- Preface Chapter 1: Introductory Tools for Literary Analysis1.1. Basics1.2. Common Critical Practices1.3. Literary Language1.4. Hermeneutics1.5. Major 20th Century Schools of Critical Analysis1.6. Socio-Political AnalysesChapter 2: Tools for Reading Narrative2.1. Story and Plot: Fabula and Syuzhet2.2. Order2.3. Mimesis/Diegesis2.4. Free Indirect Discourse2.5. Interior Monologue2.6. Diachronic and Synchronic2.7. Intertextuality2.8. Dialogism2.9. Chronotope2.10. Character Zone2.11. Focalization2.12. Narrative CodesChapter 3: Tools for Reading Poetry3.1. Tropes3.2. Elision3.3. Resemblance3.4. Objective Correlative3.5. Language Poetry3.6. The New Sentence3.7. Sound Poetry/Concrete Poetry3.8. ProsodyChapter 4: Tools for Analyzing Performance4.1. Performance Studies4.2. Realist Theatre: Total Acting4.3. Konstantin Stanislavski4.4. Lee Strasberg (The Method), David Mamet (Practical Aesthetics), Mary Overlie (The Six Viewpoints Approach)4.5. Epic Theatre4.6. Theater of Cruelty4.7. Actions4.8. Play4.9. Happenings4.10. Performance Art4.11. Guerrila TheatreChapter 5: Tools for Reading Texts as Systems5.1. Aristotle and Form5.2. The Literary Work as Object of Rational Empiricism5.3. Saussurean Linguistics5.4. Levi-Strauss and Structuralism5.5. Roman Jakobson’s Communication Model5.6. Roland Barthes’ Hierarchical Structures5.7. Ideality and Phenomenology of the Literary Object: Husserl and Derrida5.8. Dissemination5.9. Structure as Rhizome: Deleuze and Guattari5.10. Permutation5.11. Undecidability: Derrida, Gödel, Lacan5.12. Simulating Systems: Baudrillard5.13. Multiplicity: BadiouChapter 6: Tools for Social Analysis6.1. The Public Sphere6.2. Ideology6.3. Theories of Power6.4. The Social Relation
"Rapaport (Wake Forest Univ.) calls this clearly written book "a compendium of major issues and developments in literary criticism and theory" and "a companion to major issues in literary criticism and theory that can be read linearly in terms of units or areas. . . Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above." (Choice, 1 October 2011) "This is not simply a masterful and lucid introduction to literary theory, but one that explains entertainingly and rigorously how "theory," as it has emerged from a range of disciplines, is relevant to literary study. In the best tradition of the critical introduction, Rapoport's narrative and organization are provocatively original in their own right."—Eleanor Kauffman, University of California, Los Angeles"The Literary Theory Toolkit offers an excellent introduction to literary theory, but it is much more than this. Rapaport gives us an extraordinary toolbag for (in his own phrase) rummaging in. Alongside consistently lucid and perceptive accounts of different theorists, movements, concepts and arguments, there is an admirable focus on avant-garde writing and on performance art, as well as a constant concern with the social and political contexts of literary studies. One of the most probing, thought-provoking and original books of its kind, The Literary Theory Toolkit is at once idiosyncratic and authoritative, instructive and exhilarating."—Nicholas Royle, University of Sussex"The Literary Theory Toolkit offers students, researchers and teachers an extremely clear guide to the myriad complexities of recent literary theory set against a deep historical background. Herman Rapaport is exceptionally thorough and non-partisan. With precise yet economic detail he outlines the many different concepts that theorists have used to explain how texts work, giving careful attention to ways these ideas can work together or may clash; most important of all, he demonstrates how to use them in practice, starting with basic assumptions made explicit, and then proceeding step by step through examples of how these concepts can be shaped into sophisticated arguments and rewarding interpretations. Rapaport is an outstanding educator who never loses sight of his goal: to help students learn to reason about literary texts for themselves, and in doing so to be able to argue both with and against the theorists and theories. The book is full of highly readable worked examples of the interpretation of texts of all kinds, including the sort of texts that are often neglected in literary textbooks, the ones that are tricky to negotiate because opaque, avant-garde, or seeming to rely on extra-textual effects such as performance. This is an essential addition to that small number of guides and reference books that every student of literature will want to own."—Peter Middleton, University of Southampton"The Literary Theory Toolkit offers students, researchers and teachers an extremely clear guide to the myriad complexities of recent literary theory set against a deep historical background.... This is an essential addition to that small number of guides and reference books that every student of literature will want to own."—Peter Middleton, University of Southampton"In the quarter century since Terry Eagleton's landmark study, Literary Theory: An Introduction (Oxford: Blackwell, 1983), there have been dozens of books that aim at achieving a virtually encyclopedic chronicle of the various schools and methods of literary interpretation. Amidst this daunting array of thoughtful meditations on the myriad ways of characterizing the thing called 'literature,' Herman Rapaport's Literary Theory Toolkit presents a strikingly innovative perspective on theory and criticism that combines succinct and accessible accounts of the most significant approaches to the experience of literature with a unique and compelling orientation to both contemporary avant-garde experimental poetics and performance theory. This volume will establish itself as an indispensable resource for anyone interested in contemporary thinking about everything from Saussurean linguistics to Badiou's relation to Derrida to Meryl Streep's style of acting, from Milton's politics to the crisis of thinking about community after the Holocaust. Rapaport's TOOLKIT combines an original reflection on the theoretical act at large with a pedagogically useful and reliable synthesis of the enormous diversity of literary theories over the past century."—Ned Lukacher, University of Illinois at Chicago