ABSTRACT

This third edition of Modern Criticism and Theory represents a major expansion on its previous incarnations with some twenty five new pieces or essays included. This expansion has two principal purposes. Firstly, in keeping with the collection’s aim to reflect contemporary preoccupations, the reader has expanded forward to include such newly emergent considerations as ecocriticism and post-theory.

Secondly, with the aim of presenting as broad an account of modern theory as possible, the reader expands backwards to to take in exemplary pieces by formative writers and thinkers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries such as Marx, Freud and Virginia Woolf.. This radical expansion of content is prefaced by a wide-ranging introduction, which provides a rationale for the collection and demonstrates how connections can be made between competing theories and critical schools.

The purpose of the collection remains that of introducing the reader to the guiding concepts of contemporary literary and cultural debate. It does so by presenting substantial extracts from seminal thinkers and surrounding them with the contextual materials necessary to a full understanding. Each selection has a headnote, which gives biographical details of the author and provides suggestions for further reading, and footnotes that help explain difficult references. The collection is ordered both historically and thematically and readers are encouraged to draw for themselves connections between essays and theories. 

Modern Criticism and Theory has long been regarded as a necessary collection. Now revised for the twenty first century it goes further and provides students and the general reader with a wide-ranging survey of the complex landscape of modern theory and a critical assessment of the way we think – and live – in the world today.

 

 

chapter |30 pages

Introduction

chapter |9 pages

Ferdinand de Saussure

chapter |19 pages

Sigmund Freud

chapter |11 pages

Walter Benjamin

chapter |12 pages

Virginia Woolf

chapter |32 pages

Simone de Beauvoir

chapter |15 pages

Frantz Fanon

chapter |29 pages

Roman Jakobson

chapter |15 pages

Bertolt Brecht

chapter |26 pages

Jacques Lacan

chapter |15 pages

Jacques Derrida

chapter |8 pages

Tzvetan Todorov

chapter |31 pages

Mikhail Bakhtin

chapter |16 pages

E.D. Hirsch Jr.

chapter |14 pages

Michel Foucault

chapter |17 pages

Wolfgang Iser

chapter |26 pages

Roland Barthes

chapter |11 pages

Raymond Williams

chapter |10 pages

Julia Kristeva

chapter |8 pages

Hélène Cixous

chapter |16 pages

Edward Said

chapter |19 pages

Stanley Fish

chapter |9 pages

J. Hillis Miller

chapter |11 pages

Jean-François Lyotard

chapter |10 pages

Jean Baudrillard

chapter |16 pages

Paul de Man

chapter |13 pages

Geoffrey Hartman

chapter |11 pages

Umberto Eco

chapter |13 pages

Michael Riffaterre

chapter |22 pages

Patrocinio P. Schweickart

chapter |25 pages

Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick

chapter |10 pages

Luce Irigaray

chapter |14 pages

Fredric Jameson

chapter |17 pages

Stephen Greenblatt

chapter |9 pages

Jerome McGann

chapter |11 pages

Stuart Hall

chapter |15 pages

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak

chapter |19 pages

Judith Butler

chapter |15 pages

Malcolm Bowie

chapter |24 pages

Jeffrey Weeks

chapter |27 pages

Lawrence Buell

chapter |14 pages

Slavoj Žižek

chapter |23 pages

Meyda Yeğenoğlu

chapter |22 pages

David Scott Kastan

chapter |20 pages

Alexander Stille

chapter |19 pages

Valentine Cunningham

chapter |31 pages

Jacqueline Rose

chapter |14 pages

Terry Eagleton