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         Literary Criticism & Theory:     more books (100)
  1. Substance (A Review of Theory and Literary Criticism, 78) by Gilles Deleuze, Tony Jackson, et all 1995
  2. Dialectical Images: Walter Benjamin's Theory of Literary Criticism by Michael W. Jennings, 1987-09
  3. Roman literary theory and criticism,: A study in tendencies by J. F D'Alton, 1931
  4. Baudelaire, degeneration theory, and literary criticism in fin de siecle Spain.(Charles Baudelaire)(Critical essay): An article from: The Modern Language Review by Glyn Hambrook, 2006-10-01
  5. Intimate and Authentic Economies: The American Self-Made Man from Douglass to Chaplin (Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory) (Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory) by Tom Nissley, 2003-09-12
  6. Three Modes of Criticism: The Literary Theories of Scherer, Walzel, and Staiger by Peter Salm, 1968
  7. Roman Literary Theory and Criticism by J.F. D'Alton, 1962-03
  8. AMERICAN BOOKMAN: A Quarterly of Literary Theory and Criticism by 1944
  9. Crosspaths in Literary Theory and Criticism: Italy and the United States by Gregory Lucente, 1997-08-01
  10. The Collected Writings Of Thomas De Quincey: Literary Theory and Criticism V10 by Thomas De Quincey, 2007-07-25
  11. Sub-Stance a Review of Theory and Literary Criticism by Sydney, editor Levy, 1973
  12. Structure and Society in Literary History: Studies in the History and Theory of Literary Criticism by Robert Weimann, 1984-08-01
  13. Collaborative Meaning in Medieval Scribal Culture: The Otho La3amon (Editorial Theory and Literary Criticism) by Elizabeth Johnson Bryan, 1999-11-15
  14. Transatlantic Engagements with the British Eighteenth Century (Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory) by Pamela J. Albert, 2007-11-13

101. Peter Lang Publishing, Inc. N O R T H A M E R I C A - Books By Series: Studies I
Studies in literary criticism and theory. The focus of this series is on studies of all literary genres that elucidate and interpret works of art in the
http://commerce.peterlangusa.com/genBooksByCategory.asp?CategoryName=Studies in

102. Department Of Humanities - University Of Central Lancashire - EN3030 - History O
To demonstrate understanding of the way literary criticism and theory in any given period is Minnis, AJ et al Medieval literary theory and criticism.
http://www.uclan.ac.uk/facs/class/humanities/modules/en3030.htm

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EN3030 - History of Literary Criticism and Theory
  • Return to our modules listing homepage
  • Single Module
    Tutors: Brian Rosebury
    Aims and Objectives
    To enhance the student's ability to explore and debate central issues of literary criticism and theory in the light of the arguments of writers from different periods. To enhance the student's awareness of the interconnections between literary theory and practice, and between literary criticism and theory and the wider intellectual climate of different periods. To enhance the student's knowledge and understanding of some aspects of the history of literary criticism and theory from classical Greece to the early twentieth century.
    Syllabus
    Students will be encouraged both to think through the theoretical debates for themselves, indeed to engage in debate with the writers they read, and to be sensitive to the historically diverse contexts in which the texts they are studying were written. The methodological tension between these 'philosophical' and 'historical' approaches will itself be explored.
    Teaching and Learning Strategies
    In general, lectures will be oriented towards historically informed exposition, tracing continuities and discontinuities between writers and periods and identifying the impact upon criticism and theory of wider intellectual developments; seminars, which will broadly follow the chronological sequence laid out in lectures, will tend to be focused upon discrete issues and relatively short representative passages of text which will be identified, and should have been read, in advance of the seminar. At the same time, there will be an opportunity in seminar to discuss and where necessary clarify or question the historical narrative presented in lectures.

    103. Undergraduate: Concentrations, English Department, WCAS, Northwestern University
    literary criticism And theory 9. Literature And Culture 10. Literature And Gender Five concentration courses in literary criticism or theory.
    http://www.english.northwestern.edu/undergraduate/conc8.html
    Home Undergraduate Major in Lit. Concentrations
    Major in Literature

    1. Guide to Major

    2. Concentrations
    3. Honors in English

    4. Independent Study

    5. Teaching of English

    Major in Writing
    ... Study Abroad
    Concentrations
    1. New World And Postcolonial Literature

    2. Medieval Literature
    3. British Literature, 1500-1660, And Milton 4. Restoration And Eighteenth-Century British Literature ... 7. American Literature 8. Literary Criticism And Theory 9. Literature And Culture 10. Literature And Gender 11. Poetry 12. Drama ... 13. Fiction Literary Criticism And Theory Five concentration courses in literary criticism or theory. For this concentration, the student may take several concentration courses in departments or programs other than the English Department. It is possible that more than two of these courses will include texts not originally written in English. If this is the case, it is expected that the five courses outside the concentration will all be in literature originally written in English. Some courses that fulfill this concentration are:

    104. Powell S Books - Literary Criticism
    literary criticism Browse recently arrived used titles in this section The Penguin Dictionary of literary Terms and literary theory Fourth Edition
    http://www.powells.com/psection/LiteraryCriticism.html

    105. University Of Michigan Press : Literary Criticism And Theory
    Feminist Theories for Dramatic criticism (1991) Gayle Austin Feminist theory And literary Practice (2000) Deborah L. Madsen
    http://www.press.umich.edu/subject.do?id=317.U291.

    106. Postmodernism
    Re Feminist theory new. tammy, 1216-04 1039. Re Feminist theory new Re literary theory new. marcin, 10-28-04 1719. Re literary theory new
    http://killdevilhill.com/postmodernchat/wwwboard.html
    Postmodernism
    New Postmodernism Forum at jollyrogerwest.com
    Great Books and Postmodernism essay tips. Study hard and write your own papers and term papers! //Required //var site = '681666'; //var mnum = '139010'; //Not Required var max_words = 4; var max_links_per_word = 4; var link_color = '0107A1'; var boxbg_color = 'FFFAEA'; var boxtitle_color = 'black'; var boxdesc_color = 'black'; var boxurl_color = 'red'; Open Source CMS Renaissance Postnuke Hosting Gallery Hosting Blog Hosting ... Physics T-shirts
    Ahoy mate! Welcome to the new Postmodernism campfire forum!
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    107. Literary Criticism
    Easier literary criticism is a view or opinion on what a particular written It covers time periods, cultural backgrounds, literary theories, and more.
    http://42explore.com/litcrit.htm
    The Topic:
    Literary Criticism
    Easier - Literary criticism is a view or opinion on what a particular written work means. It is about the meanings that a reader finds in an author's literature. Harder - Literary criticism is an attempt to evaluate and understand the creative writing, the literature of an author. Literature includes plays, essays, novels, poetry, and short stories. Literary criticism is a description, analysis, evaluation, or interpretation of a particular literary work or an author's writings as a whole. Literary criticism is usually expressed in the form of a critical essay. In-depth book reviews are also sometimes viewed as literary criticism. Critical Reading by B. Laga at Mesa State College
    http://mesastate.edu/~blaga/theoryindex/theoryhomex.html This guide created for college students introduces literary theory and criticism. Related Websites: 2) Critical Reading: A Guide by J. Lye

    108. Guide To Literary And Critical Theory
    Introductory Guide to Critical theory. Written and Designed by Dino Felluga. Visits since July 17, 2002. News and Information. Progress Report
    http://www.cla.purdue.edu/academic/engl/theory/
    home page e-mail NEWS Last Update: Nov. 28, 2003 Theoretical Pursuit: A Self-Test Game Introductory Guide to Critical Theory Written and Designed by
    Dino Felluga
    Visits since July 17, 2002: var go_mem="felluga";
    News and Information Progress Report Progress on the site was delayed by the start of classes and my role in organizing the inaugural conference of the North American Victorian Studies Association (Oct. 17-19, 2003); however, I have now completed the first set of modules in each of the critical schools above. The Modules now available are for Sigmund Freud Jacques Lacan and Julia Kristeva (under Psychoanalysis); for Roland Barthes Peter Brooks , and Algirdas Greimas (under Narratology); for Michel Foucault and Judith Butler (under Gender and Sex); for Karl Marx Fredric Jameson and Louis Althusser (under Marxism); for

    109. Simon: Literary Criticism, Pt. 1
    It would be too strong to say that literary critics and theorists of literary A taxonomy of theories of literary criticism might derive from answers to
    http://www.stanford.edu/group/SHR/4-1/text/simon1.html
    SEHR, volume 4, issue 1: Bridging the Gap
    Updated 8 April 1995
    Editor's note: Professor Simon's article appears here in 5 parts. This is the first part.
    literary criticism: a cognitive approach
    part 1 Herbert Simon Je comprends mal ce texte
    Laissez, laissez! Je trouve de belles choses. Il les tire de moi. . . .
    Paul Valery, Instants Literary criticism concerns (among other things) the meanings of, in, and evoked by literary texts. Cognitive science concerns thinking, by people and computers, and extracting or evoking meanings while reading and writing requires thinking. Hence, there is a wide expanse of ground common to literary criticism and cognitive science. But a casual examination of leading books from the two domains suggests that each has little awareness of the other, or of the possible relevance of the other to its concerns. With rare exceptions, there is little or no cross-referencing. It would be too strong to say that literary critics and theorists of literary criticism are ignorant of the social sciences. But although many of them know about Marx and Freud, fewer are acquainted with contemporary cognitive science. Only a few, like Siegfried Schmidt (1968) and Robert de Beaugrande (1980), are well versed in both literature and cognition. It would also be too strong to say that all cognitive scientists are ignorant of literary criticism, but they certainly do not mention it often in their footnotes. Some researchers, like my colleagues John R. Hayes and Linda Flower (1980) and Patricia Carpenter and Marcel Just (1987), have studied the processes of writing and reading but have not extended their studies to works of literature. Some others, like Jean Mandler (1978) and Wendy Lehnert (1981), have analysed the "grammars" employed in the structures of stories. But the numbers of such scholars are few and the literature of the subject not large.

    110. Internet Public Library: Criticism
    literary criticism Collection http//www.ipl.org/div/litcrit/ The IPL literary criticism Collection contains critical and biographical websites about
    http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.20.00/
    dqmcodebase = "/javascript/"
    Subject Collections

    Business

    Computers

    Education
    ... Criticism This collection All of the IPL Advanced
    Resources in this category:
    You can also view Magazines Associations on the Net under this heading.
    Blogcritics.org
    http://blogcritics.org/index.php
    A collaborative blog where bloggers review "music, books, film, popular culture, and technology." Popular culture is a grab bag of responses to politics, recent news items, controversial issues, and things to see and do around the country and the world (like the Dachua Beer festival). One can also find discussions/responses to current events in music, books, and film here.
    BookBlog
    http://www.bookblog.net/
    A book discussion group that meets once a month online. Each member of BookBlog volunteers to choose a book, begin the discussion by making the first post, and moderate that discussion.
    bookreporter.com
    http://www.bookreporter.com/
    Browse by category or search for recent book reviews, excerpts, and author interviews, done just for the Bookreporter. Reviews range from a paragraph to a page with the longer reviews being signed.
    Bookslut
    http://www.bookslut.com/index.php

    111. English 60A: Contemporary Critical Theory
    Website for Modern Critical ThoughtA very nice site, prepared by Mary Undergraduate Introduction to literary TheoryA spiffy introduction to new
    http://www.lawrence.edu/dept/english/courses/60A/
    Welcome to the homepage . . .
    . . . for English 60A, a course on contemporary critical theory taught by Tim Spurgin, a member of the English Department at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. Here's what you'll find on this page:
    • Basic information a description of the content and format of the course; capsule biographies of class members; etc.
    • Syllabus, handouts, and responses from students just what it says; the students' responses are especially interesting
    • Webs spun by students webs designed to illuminate and comment on issues treated in this course
    • Internet resources a list of links to sites dealing with materials from the course; the list includes the "Marx/Engels Archive," "Deconstruction on the Net," and a spiffy "Page for John Cage"
    Basic information

    112. 1993 Project: Marxist Criticism
    Marxism and other theories. Marxist literary criticism may be thought of as a reaction to many of the rigid theories of the New Critics.
    http://www.lawrence.edu/dept/english/courses/60A/marxist.html
    1993 HYPERTEXT DATABASE: MARXIST CRITICISM These materials were created by students back in 1993 as part of an early experiment with hypertext. They were designed to serve as a kind of online reference tool, an electronic database, that would provide information to students who weren't taking English 60A. The authors of these materials were Chris Abele, Liz Cronmiller, Allison DeZurik, Josh Hudson, Diana Marinos, Matt Ogborn, and Tamara Pellicier. If they ever visit this site, I hope they'll drop me a line. Table of Contents Introduction
    Marxist literary criticism is based upon the political and economic theories of the German philosopher Karl Marx. In works like The German Ideology and The Communist Manifesto , written with Frederick Engels , Marx proposes a model of history in which economic and political conditions determine social conditions. Marx and Engels were responding to social hardships stemming from the rise of capitalism. Appropriately, their theories are formulated specifically to analyze how society functions in a state of upheaval and constant change. A materialist view of history Using Hegel's theory of dialectic , which suggests that history progresses through the resolution of contradictions within a particular aspect of reality, Marx and Engels posit a materialist account of history that focuses upon the struggles and tensions within society. As society forms more complex modes of production, it becomes increasingly stratified; and the resulting tensions necessitate changes in society. For example, the introduction of heavy machinery into the feudal economic system fragmented existing social structures and necessitated a move towards capitalism.

    113. Domestic Goddesses Literary Criticism
    A Collection of literary criticism of Alcott, Chopin, Wharton, Cather, feminist theorists’ . . . Gilman’s relationship with S. Weir Mitchell. .
    http://www.womenwriters.net/domesticgoddess/dgcriticism.htm

    Alcott
    Cather Chopin Gilman ... Search the site
    (note: some browsers don't support "anchors." If you do not jump to your chosen author, use your scroll arrow.) Check out our other site Women Writers, a guide to women authors on the Internet, plus articles, scholarship and more... ALL PAPERS ON THIS PAGE ARE THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY OF THEIR AUTHORS, AND
    Please read these important notes to students!!
    How to Cite this Website/these Papers in a Works Cited Page
    Any of these works may be read, explored, and used as research and quoted support for your own argument, but be certain that you follow MLA guidelines for citation of electronic sources. The papers are intended as additions to the scholarly community, not as freebies that you can plagiarize at will. Remember, most Universities have a strict policy on plagiarism you could receive an "F" for any course wherein you are suspected of plagiarism, and you could face even more severe penalties. Since these papers are written by professional scholars, your teacher will probably be able to tell if you "borrow" from them without giving credit for ideas, even if they are paraphrased (reworded).
    Also, be sure to consider many sources, including those that you can find in your University's library. This Webpage is not, nor is it intended to be, a final and authoritative critique. This is a small collection of voices in a very large discourse about these authors. Much of what is here is well evidenced opinion use it to research and form

    114. E602:LITERARY THEORY And CRITICAL PRACTICE

    http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/press/EyeStuff/602-2000/THEORY.html

    115. Redireccionado

    http://155.210.60.15/FILOLOGIA_INGLESA/BIBLIOGRAPHY.HTML

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