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The Geoffrey Hartman Reader / edited by Geoffrey Hartman and Daniel T. O'Hara.

De Gruyter Edinburgh University Press Backlist eBook-Package 2013-2000 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hartman, Geoffrey, Author.
Contributor:
O'Hara, Daniel T., 1948- editor.
Hartman, Geoffrey H., editor.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Criticism--History--20th century.
Criticism.
Literature, Modern--History and criticism--Theory, etc.
Literature, Modern.
Literature, Modern--History and criticism.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (481 pages)
Place of Publication:
Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press, [2004]
Summary:
Winner of the 2006 Truman Capote Prize for Literary AchievementGeoffrey Hartman's interests range over almost the entire field of contemporary literature and culture. In this, the first Reader of his work, significant essays reflect his abiding interest in English and American poetry, focusing not only on Romanticism but also on the transition from early modern to modern and including reflections on the radical elements in artistic representation. Hartman, whose book on Wordsworth changed our understanding of that poet, brings theory and close reading together. A major consideration of Freud is accompanied by intensive analyses of Lacan and Derrida, and a psychoesthetic theory of literary genesis is proposed. Popular literature is examined through the American detective novel; Jane Austen, Virginia Woolf, and Bernard Malamud are brought together in an examination of realism; the premodern mode of midrashic interpretation is reintroduced to literary study; and major trends in criticism, including trauma studies, receive attention. Hartman's assessment of the media revolution and cultural studies is represented by shorter pieces of film criticism as well as his classic essays on 'Public Memory and its Discontents' and 'Tele-Suffering and Testimony' - the latter also describes a pioneering effort to collect on video the experiences of Holocaust survivors. This anthology is both highly readable and, because of its range and intellectual vigour, essential for all those concerned with the fate of the humanities and the future of literary criticism. FeaturesLeading US critic of contemporary literature and culture, particularly in the areas of poetry, Romanticism, trauma studies, public culture, pedagogy, and literary theory and criticismSelection ranges across Geoffrey Hartman's illustrious career with the readings organised into six thematic partsPublication coincides with the 50th anniversary of Geoffrey Hartman's first published book
Contents:
Frontmatter
Contents
The Culture of Vision
Autobiographical Introduction ‘Life and Learning’
Christopher Smart’s ‘Magnificat’: Toward a Theory of Representation
Evening Star and Evening Land
Wordsworth’s Magic Mountains
The Use and Abuse of Structural Analysis
Romance And Modernity: Keat’s ‘Ode to Psyche’
Purufucation and Danger in American Poetry
Pure Representation
The New Perseus
The Heroics of Realism
Literature High and Low: The Case of the Mystery Story
Romanticism and Anti-Self-Consciousness
Text and Spirit
Midrash as Law and Literature
The Voice of the Shuttle
Practical Criticism
The Sacred Jungle
Radical Art and Radical Analysis
The Critical Essay between Theory and Tradition
literary Commentary as Literature
Words and Wounds
Reading, Trauma, Pedagogy
Defining Culture
The Question of Our Speech
Pastoral Vestiges
Realism and ‘America’
The Reinvention of Hate
Jeanne Moreau’s Lumière
Spielberg’s Schindler’s List
The Interpreter’s Freud
Lacan, Derrida, and the Specular Name
Public Memory and its Discontents
Tele-Suffering and Testimony
Poetics after the Holocaust
Passion and Literary Engagement
Index
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9781474468930
1474468934

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