ABSTRACT

Using Key Passages to Understand Literature, Theory and Criticism is a completely fresh and innovative approach to teaching and learning literary theory: using short passages of theory to make sense of literary and cultural texts. It focuses on the key concepts that help readers understand literature and cultural events in new and provocative ways. Covering a wide variety of iconic and contemporary theorists, the book offers a broad chronological and global overview, including thirty passages from theorists such as Viktor Shklovsky, Roland Barthes, Judith Butler, Diana Fuss, Jean Baudrillard, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Michel Foucault, Monique Wittig, and Eve Sedgwick.

Built on the premise that scholars use theory pragmatically, Using Key Passages to Understand Literature, Theory and Criticism identifies problems, puzzles, and questions readers may encounter when they read a story, watch a film, or look at artwork. It explains, in detail, thirty concepts that help readers make sense of these works and invites students to apply the concepts to a range of writing and research projects. The textbook concludes by helping students read theory with an eye on finding productive passages and writing their own “theory chapter,” signaling a shift from student as critic to student as theorist.

Used as a main text in introductory theory courses or as a supplement to any literature, film, theater, or art course, this book helps students read closely and think critically.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Joining the community

chapter 1|8 pages

Becoming a subject

chapter 2|7 pages

Scripting identity

chapter 3|9 pages

Doing not describing

chapter 4|8 pages

Enjoying the carnivalesque

chapter 5|7 pages

Reading as writing

chapter 6|8 pages

Simulating the real

chapter 7|9 pages

Creating a space between

chapter 8|7 pages

Performing gender

chapter 9|7 pages

Locating trauma

chapter 10|9 pages

Intersecting identities

chapter 11|8 pages

Locating alterity

chapter 12|7 pages

Poaching texts

chapter 13|9 pages

Cultivating rhizomes

chapter 14|6 pages

Reconciling double consciousness

chapter 15|7 pages

Shocking readers

chapter 16|7 pages

Joining power and knowledge

chapter 17|7 pages

Revealing the uncanny

chapter 18|8 pages

Questioning human/nonhuman boundaries

chapter 19|8 pages

Historicizing and contextualizing

chapter 20|6 pages

Signifying through time

chapter 21|8 pages

Thinking ecologically

chapter 22|7 pages

Recognizing conceptual metaphors

chapter 23|8 pages

Representing disability

chapter 24|7 pages

Losing and recovering our sovereignty

chapter 25|8 pages

Resisting the dominant culture

chapter 26|9 pages

Adapting and appropriating

chapter 27|8 pages

Describing homosocial relationships

chapter 28|8 pages

Defamiliarizing the familiar

chapter 29|8 pages

Questioning gender binaries

chapter 30|5 pages

Building on another’s work

Identifying key concepts