ABSTRACT

First published in 1977, this book was the first to map extensively the ideological typography of the Anglo-American tradition of literary theory. It interrogates, comprehensively and in detail, the assumptions and categorical development within critical ideas from I. A. Richards and T. S. Eliot, through John Crowe Ransom and the New Criticism, to Northrop Frye and Marshall NcLuhan. This analysis reveals the Anglo-American tradition of literary-cultural theory is most properly intelligible within the overall field of social consciousness as an ideology of progressive cultural rationalization. Against a background of ideological development since nineteenth-century Romanticism, John Fekete illuminates the boundaries of literary ideology in relation to the shapes and changes of modern culture and society.

part |39 pages

General Introduction

part |63 pages

John Crowe Ransom

chapter |9 pages

Fugitive and Post-Fugitive

chapter |24 pages

Agrarianism

chapter |14 pages

New Criticism

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion to Ransom

part |27 pages

Northrop Frye

chapter |25 pages

Mythological Structuralism

part |57 pages

Marshall McLuhan

chapter |11 pages

Introduction to McLuhan

chapter |16 pages

Three Phases of Development

part |10 pages

Conclusion to McLuhan

part |15 pages

General Conclusion