ABSTRACT

First published in 1957, Literary Criticism: A Short History traces our aesthetic heritage from its classical origins up to the contemporary state of criticism in the English-speaking world.

Divided into four volumes, each book adopts a fair and objective position in the presentation of various critical positions, and each critical theory is considered not only in competition with other critical theories, but also in vital dialectic with the creative literature of its own time.

Volume Three focuses on Romantic criticism and covers poetic diction, German ideas, imagination, rhapsodic didacticism, the Arnoldian prophecy, art as propaganda, art for art’s sake, expressionism, and the Historical Method.

part |216 pages

Romantic Criticism

chapter Chapter 16|24 pages

Poetic Diction: Wordsworth and Coleridge

chapter Chapter 17|21 pages

German Ideas

chapter Chapter 18|28 pages

Imagination: Wordsworth and Coleridge

chapter Chapter 19|20 pages

Peacock vs. Shelley: Rhapsodic Didacticism

chapter Chapter 20|22 pages

The Arnoldian Prophecy

chapter Chapter 21|21 pages

The Real and the Social: Art as Propaganda

chapter Chapter 22|24 pages

Art for Art’s Sake

chapter Chapter 23|23 pages

Expressionism: Benedetto Croce

chapter Chapter 24|31 pages

The Historical Method: A Retrospect