ABSTRACT

This incredibly useful volume offers an introduction to the history of literary criticism and theory from ancient Greece to the present. Grounded in the close reading of landmark theoretical texts, while seeking to encourage the reader's critical response, Pelagia Goulimari examines:

  • major thinkers and critics from Plato and Aristotle to Foucault, Derrida, Kristeva, Said and Butler;
  • key concepts, themes and schools in the history of literary theory: mimesis, inspiration, reason and emotion, the self, the relation of literature to history, society, culture and ethics, feminism, poststructuralism, postcolonialism, queer theory;
  • genres and movements in literary history: epic, tragedy, comedy, the novel; Romanticism, realism, modernism and postmodernism.

Historical connections between theorists and theories are traced and the book is generously cross-referenced. With useful features such as key-point conclusions, further reading sections, descriptive text boxes, detailed headings, and with a comprehensive index, this book is the ideal introduction to anyone approaching literary theory for the first time or unfamiliar with the scope of its history.

chapter |1 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

Mimēsis

Plato and the poet

chapter 2|24 pages

Aristotle and tragedy

From Poetics to postcolonial tragedy

chapter 3|27 pages

Medieval and Renaissance criticism

From mimesis to creation

chapter 4|26 pages

The Enlightenment and Romanticism

Reason and imagination

chapter 6|23 pages

Freud and psychoanalytic criticism

The self in fragments

chapter 8|46 pages

Decentering modernisms

Newness, tradition, culture and society

chapter 9|33 pages

Twentieth-century North American criticism

Close reading to interpretation, modernism to postmodernism, History to histories

chapter 11|25 pages

From structuralism to poststructuralism

Text, power, minor literature, deconstruction

chapter 12|30 pages

Poststructuralist deviations

Mimicry, resignification, contrapuntal reading, the subaltern, Signifyin(g), hybridity