The English Handbook: A Guide to Literary Studies is a comprehensive textbook, providing essential practical and analytical reading and writing skills for literature students at all levels. With advice and information on fundamental methods of literary analysis and research, Whitla equips students with the knowledge and tools essential for advanced literary study. Includes traditional close reading strategies integrated with newer critical theory, ranging from gender and genre to post-structuralism and post-colonialism; with examples from Beowulf to Atwood, folk ballads to Fugard, and Christopher Marlowe to Conrad's Marlow Draws on a wide range of resources, from print to contemporary electronic media Supplies a companion website with chapter summaries, charts, examples, web links, and suggestions for further study
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The English Handbook: A Guide to Literary Studies is a comprehensive new textbook providing essential practical and analytical reading and writing skills for literature students at all levels. The Handbook features coverage of all key areas, from sonnets to irony to close textual analysis.
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Preface. List of Abbreviations. PART I: Introduction. 1. What is English and What is Literature? "English" and "Literature": The Subject in Question. The Uses of Literature. Great Books and "Trash": The Canon Wars. Literary History, Periods, and Movements: Four Approaches to the Past. Critical Interpretation and Analysis. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. PART II: Foundational Skills. 2. Reading English: From Opening a Book to Critical Analysis. Foundational Reading Strategies: Overview and Detail. Five Intensive Methods of Reading Literature. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. 3. Library Research and Scholarly Method. How to Find what You Need: Old and New Methods. Research Methods and Library Classification Systems. Printed Library Resources. Research on the Web. Evaluating What You Find. Plagiarism. Documenting Your Sources. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. 4. Writing in English Studies. Different Kinds of Assignments: Their Objectives and Audience. Kinds of Essays. Reading the Assignment. Establishing a Logical Position. Organizing Your Argument: Computer Drafts and Thesis Statement. Building Paragraphs and Arguments. Integrating Quotations. Revising for Content, Argument, and Style. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. PART III The Major Genres. 5. Drama. Plays, Drama, Theater, Performance: The Varieties. of Institutional Formation. Drama, Text, and Speech. The Theater and the Play: The Shape of the Stage and the History of Drama. Dramatic Action and Structure in Relation to Genre. Character Types and the Unities. Reading Plays. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. 6. Prose Fiction. Definitions: Novel, Fiction, Narrative, Metafiction. History and Origins. Reading Prose Fiction. Character, Setting, and Action in Prose Fiction. Bakhtin: Monophonic and Polyphonic Novels. Narratology: From Story to Narrative Discourse. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. 7. Poetry. The Elements of Poetry. Reading Poems: A Prelude to Critical Analysis. Critical Analysis. Prosody: An Introduction to Versification. Scansion. Line Length, Pauses, and Continuity. Sound. Rhyme. Stanzas and Diction. Ambiguity and Irony. Four Verse Forms. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. PART IV: Theory. 8 Language and Literary Studies. Linguistics: The Systematic Study of Language. Rhetoric and Persuasion. Literary Stylistics. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. 9. Recent Critical Practice. The Analysis of Genre: What Kind of Thing is That? Formalisms. Reading the Signs: Semiotics for Students of Literature. From One Meaning to Many: Constructing and Deconstructing the Text. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. 10. The Politics of Reading: Gender, Class, and Ethnicity. Gender Matters. Being Class Conscious. Ethnic Difference: Reading in a Postcolonial Context. Conclusion. Further Reading. Web Pages of Interest. References. Index.
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"It would certainly be helpful to students to have multiple copies available in their academic libraries." ( Reference Reviews , 2012)

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781405183765
Publisert
2009-09-04
Utgiver
Vendor
Wiley-Blackwell (an imprint of John Wiley & Sons Ltd)
Vekt
704 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
161 mm
Dybde
29 mm
Aldersnivå
05, U
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
360

Forfatter

Biographical note

William Whitla is Professor Emeritus and Senior Scholar in English and Humanities at York University in Toronto . He has published The Central Truth (on Robert Browning, 1963), Essays and Reviews (on Victorian literature and religion, with Victor Shea, 2000), and Foundations: Critical Thinking, Reading , and Writing (also with Victor Shea, 2001 and 2005).