Subjectivity and Literature from the Romantics to the Present DayPhilip Shaw, Peter Stockwell Pinter Publishers, 1991 - 175 עמודים The distance between Kant and Foucault marks out the philosophical and chronological space within which the textual studies of this book address the complex question of subjectivity in literature. Originally arising from an academic conference held at Liverpool University, these essays represent the work of a new generation of researchers in the vanguard of contemporary literary studies. Combining radical new approaches to established authors in the 'literary canon' as well as pioneering work on important contemporary writers, the subjects treated in this book include Wordsworth, the Bronte's, Wallace Stevens, George Orwell, Philip Larkin, Ray Bradbury, John Folwes, Clarice Lispector, Ian McEwan, Georges Perec and others. A post-script is provided by Professor Vincent Newey. |
תוכן
Feminity Feminism and | 28 |
Identity | 41 |
Epiphany and Subjectivity in Charlotte Brontës Villette | 49 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
10 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
aesthetic appears attempt Bachelard Bataille become Bloom chapter character Chuck Jones Clarice Lispector Clegg construction critical critique death Deleuze Derrida desire discourse discussion Doctor Phillips Emily Brontë emotional epiphany essay example experience female femininity feminist fiction Foucault Fowles function gender Hegel hero human idea identity imperial individual John Fowles Kant Key West knowledge language Larkin literary London Lucy's Lyotard lyric male Marryat McEwan means memory metaphor Miranda narrative narrator narrator's notion novel oral Orwell patriarchal Perec phallus philosopher poem poet poetic poetry present prisoner protagonist Ramon Fernandez Ray Bradbury reader reading reality relation represented role romantic romanticism seems semiotic sense sexual Shooting an Elephant signifier space speaker spirit stanza Stevens story structure Sublime suggests symbolic textual theory thought topo-analysis tradition transgression University Press Valène vampirism voice Wallace Stevens woman women words Wordsworth writing Wuthering Heights