ABSTRACT

Literature in English: How and Why is an accessible guide for students. It deals with the fundamental concepts of literary form and genre; the history of English-language literature from the medieval period to the present; relations between the study of literature and other disciplines; literary theory; researching a topic; and writing a paper. This new edition contains a brand new chapter which takes literary theory to another level, using it to link literature to the issues that concern us most, whether in our own lives or in the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. The book has also been fully updated throughout, with significant additions to the introduction and further reading sections.

Overall, Literature in English:

• Grounds the study of literature throughout by referencing a selection of well-known novels, plays and poems

• Examines the central questions that readers ask when confronting literary texts, and shows how these make literary theory meaningful and necessary

• Links British, American and postcolonial literature into a coherent whole

• Discusses film as literature and provides the basic conceptual tools needed to study film within a literature-course framework

• Places particular emphasis on interdisciplinarity by examining the connections between the study of literature and other disciplines

• Links literary theory to current global challenges, placing special emphasis on new and evolving approaches such as ecocriticism, new materialism and the spatial turn

• Provides extensive guidance on further reading.

Written in a clear and engaging style, this is an essential guide for literature students around the world.

part I|19 pages

Beginnings

chapter 1|5 pages

Good morrow

chapter 3|5 pages

Canons

part II|50 pages

Form and genre

chapter 4|12 pages

Poetry

chapter 5|9 pages

The thing which is not

chapter 6|14 pages

Prose fiction

chapter 7|13 pages

Plays and films

part III|48 pages

Periods and movements

chapter 8|14 pages

Medieval and early modern

chapter 10|15 pages

From 1900 to the present

part IV|67 pages

Positions, identities, ideas

chapter 11|18 pages

The place of literature

chapter 12|21 pages

Literary theory

chapter 13|26 pages

Theories and goals

part VI|18 pages

Over to you

chapter 14|8 pages

Primary and secondary sources

chapter 15|8 pages

Reading, research, writing