The Sociology of Literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 36
Page 20
... recent members of the Tel Quel Group who have seen it as a way of creating multiple readings of a text in defiance of the habitual and limiting ' logocentrism ' of the West ( Culler , 1975 , Ch . 10 ) . Although the Te ! Quel Group is ...
... recent members of the Tel Quel Group who have seen it as a way of creating multiple readings of a text in defiance of the habitual and limiting ' logocentrism ' of the West ( Culler , 1975 , Ch . 10 ) . Although the Te ! Quel Group is ...
Page 86
... recent American crime novel , No Orchids for Miss Blandish . Symons recognises this change but refuses to deprecate it as Orwell had done . Instead Symons suggests that the earlier , closed world of detective writers such as Agatha ...
... recent American crime novel , No Orchids for Miss Blandish . Symons recognises this change but refuses to deprecate it as Orwell had done . Instead Symons suggests that the earlier , closed world of detective writers such as Agatha ...
Page 111
... recent English intellectual life has discouraged theoretical criticism so that as important a theoretical critic as Coleridge has scarcely received his due . Descriptive criticism has , then , been dominant since the time of Dryden ...
... recent English intellectual life has discouraged theoretical criticism so that as important a theoretical critic as Coleridge has scarcely received his due . Descriptive criticism has , then , been dominant since the time of Dryden ...
Contents
The sociology of literature | 24 |
The sociology of the author | 50 |
The novel realism and modernism | 64 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ability able accept actual allowed already approach argued argument artist attempt audience authors become belief bourgeois century chapter character common complex concept concern consequence considerable considered course criticism culture described discussion early effect encouraged English especially established evidence example experience explain fact final forces given historical human idea imagination important increase individual industrial insistence intellectual interest language less libraries limited literary living Lukács manner Marxist mass matter means MICHIGAN mind modernist nature necessary noted novel offered once origin particular perhaps period plays political popular literature position possible produced Proust publishing question readers reading realised reality reason recent referent relations result School Secondly seems seen sense social society sociology story stress structure suggests tend theory traditional true understanding UNIVERSITY values writers