The English studies book : an introduction to language, literature and culture
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The English studies book : an introduction to language, literature and culture
Routledge, 2002
2nd ed
- : hbk
- : pbk
Available at / 36 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [399]-409) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The English Studies Book is uniquely designed to support students and teachers working across the full range of language, literature and culture. Combining the functions of study guide, critical dictionary and text anthology, it has rapidly established itself as a core text on a wide variety of degree programmes nationally and internationally.
Revised and updated throughout, features of the second edition include:
* a new prologue addressing changes and challenges in English Studies
* substantial entries on over 100 key critical and theoretical terms, from 'absence' and 'author' to 'text' and 'versification' - with new entries on 'creative writing', 'travel writing' and 'translation'
* practical introductions to all the major theoretical approaches, with new sections on aesthetics, ethics, ecology and sexuality
* a rich anthology of literary and related texts from Anglo-Saxon to Afro-Caribbean, with fresh selections representing the sonnet, haiku, slave narratives and science fiction, and with additional texts by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Charles Darwin, Ian McEwan, Margaret Atwood, Amy Tan and others
* handy frameworks and checklists for close reading, research, essay writing and other textual activities, including use of the Internet.
Table of Contents
- Prologue. Change and Challenge Today Crossing borders, establishing boundaries
- Texts in contexts, literature and history
- Seeing through theory
- Technologizing the subject: actual and virtual communities
- English Literature and Creative Writing
- English still spells EFL, ESL, ESP, EAP
- The shaping of things to come ... Part One. Introduction to English Studies 1.1 Which 'Englishes? 1.2 One English language, literature, culture - or many? 1.3 Summary: one and many 1.4 Activities, reading 1.5 How studied? 1.6 Summary: pasts, presents and futures 1.7 Activities, discussion, reading 1.8 Fields of Study 1.9 Summary: keeping on course and making your own way Part Two. Theoretical Positions and Practical Approaches: 2.1 Getting some initial bearings 2.2 Theory in practice - a working model 2.3 Practical Criticism and (old) New Criticism 2.4 Formalism into Functionalism 2.5 Psychological approaches 2.6 Marxism, Cultural Materialism and New Historicism 2.7 Feminism, Gender and Sexuality 2.8 Poststructuralism and Postmodernism 2.9 Postcolonialism and multiculturalism 2.10 Towards a new eclecticism: Ethics, Aesthetics, Ecology ...? Part Three. Common Topics: Absence and presence, gaps and silences, centres and margins
- Accent and dialect
- Addresser, address, addressee
- Aesthetics and pleasure, art and beauty
- Author and authority
- Auto/biography and travel writing: self and other
- Bibles, holy books and myths
- Canon and classic
- Character and characterisation
- Comedy and tragedy, carnival and the absurd
- Creative writing, creativity and re-creation
- Difference and similarity, preference and re-valuation
- Drama and theatre, film and TV
- Foreground, background and point of view Genre and kinds of text
- Image, imagery and imagination
- Narrative in story and history: novel, news and film
- Poetry and word-play
- Realism and representation: fiction, fact, faction and metafiction
- Speech and conversation, monologue and dialogue
- Standards and standardisation, varieties and variation
- Subject and agent, role and identity
- Text, context and intertextuality Translation and translation studies
- Versification: rhythm, metre and rhyme
- Writing and
- reading, response and re-writing
- Your own modifications and additions Part Four. Textual Activities and Learning Strategies: 4.1 Overview of textual activities 4.2 Frameworks and checklists for close reading 4.3 Writing and research from essays to the Internet 4.4 Alternative modes of critical and creative writing Part Five. Anthology of Sample Texts: 5.1 Poetry, song and performance 5.2 Prose fiction, life-writing and news5.3 Drama - scripts and transcripts, monologue and dialogue 5.4 Intertextual clusters Part Six. Glossary of Grammatical and Linguistic Terms. Appendices: A Maps of Britain, the USA and the World B A chronology of English language, literature, culture, communication and media C English and or as other educational subjects D An alphabet of speech sounds Bibliography Relevant journals and useful addresses Index
by "Nielsen BookData"