Origins and Identities in French Literature

Origins and Identities in French Literature
Author: Norman
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2023-11-27
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9004651632

The essays in this volume investigate origins and identities of individuals and groups in French literature from the seventeenth century to the present, as well in French literature in general. They show how, as France developed a national identity through its literature, individuals of various origins searched for their own identities and often called into question not only traditional identities, but also the very literary means of creating them.

Edmund Wilson

Edmund Wilson
Author: Lewis M. Dabney
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 1997
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780691016719

Edmund Wilson, who helped shape American literary culture from the early 1920s through the mid '60s, is still a presence a century after his birth. This vibrant collection emerges from symposiums in Wilson's centenary year, 1995, at the Mercantile Library in New York and at Princeton University. Assembled and edited by Lewis Dabney, the book shows the intellectual voices of a younger generation interacting with veterans who knew Wilson and his times.

Text

Text
Author: W. Speed Hill
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 458
Release: 1997
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780472109234

The newest volume in the distinguished annual

Edmund Wilson

Edmund Wilson
Author: Richard Hauer Costa
Publisher: Syracuse University Press
Total Pages: 198
Release: 1980-11-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780815601630

For the eminent American literary critic Edmund Wilson, Upstate New York was home. Richard Hauer Costa's biography of Wilson's final years, from 1962 to 1972, in Talcottville, NY, combines the literary, the political, and the domestic in an engaging portrait of Wilson as "squierarchical, Dickensian, benevolent." Costa shows us a very personal, accessible man as he tells us about Wilson's opinions, literary and otherwise, his likes and dislikes, his almost spiritual link to Talcottville, his failing health in his final years, his habits (moviegoing) and idiosyncracies (sneakers). What emerges is a profile of Wilson not at all like the stern figure of academic biography. Also included are interviews Costa conducted after Wilson's death with noted Upstate novelist Walter D. Edmonds, Canadian writer Morley Callaghan, and Wilson's Upstate friend, Mary Pcolar.

Melville Biography

Melville Biography
Author: Hershel Parker
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
Total Pages: 609
Release: 2012
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0810127091

Melville Biography: An Inside Narrative is Hershel Parker’s history of the writing of Melville biographies, enriched by his intimate working relationships with great Melvilleans, dead and living. The first part is a mesmerizing autobiographical account of what went into creating his award-winning two-volume life of Herman Melville. Next, Parker traces six decades the persistent war New Critics have waged against biographical scholarship on Melville. American literary critics, he finds, impose New Critical theories of organic unity on Melville’s disrupted career even while truncating his body of work and minimizing his aesthetic interests. Parker celebrates the "divine amateurs" who use new technology to discover dazzling Melville stories and also lauds the writers of literature blogs as potential redeemers of academic and mainstream media reviewing. In the third part, Parker invites readers into his biographical workshop and challenges them with ambitious research assignments. Throughout this bold book, Parker seeks to reinvigorate the all-but-lost art of scholarly literary criticism and biography.

The Letters of Robert Lowell

The Letters of Robert Lowell
Author: Robert Lowell
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 893
Release: 2007-03-20
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0374530343

These letters document the evolution of Lowell's work and illuminate another side of his life: his deep friendships with other writers, his manic depression, his marriages to three prose writers, and his involvement with the antiwar movement of the 1960s.

Always Already New

Always Already New
Author: Lisa Gitelman
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2008-08-29
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0262572478

In Always Already New, Lisa Gitelman explores the newness of new media while she asks what it means to do media history. Using the examples of early recorded sound and digital networks, Gitelman challenges readers to think about the ways that media work as the simultaneous subjects and instruments of historical inquiry. Presenting original case studies of Edison's first phonographs and the Pentagon's first distributed digital network, the ARPANET, Gitelman points suggestively toward similarities that underlie the cultural definition of records (phonographic and not) at the end of the nineteenth century and the definition of documents (digital and not) at the end of the twentieth. As a result, Always Already New speaks to present concerns about the humanities as much as to the emergent field of new media studies. Records and documents are kernels of humanistic thought, after all—part of and party to the cultural impulse to preserve and interpret. Gitelman's argument suggests inventive contexts for "humanities computing" while also offering a new perspective on such traditional humanities disciplines as literary history. Making extensive use of archival sources, Gitelman describes the ways in which recorded sound and digitally networked text each emerged as local anomalies that were yet deeply embedded within the reigning logic of public life and public memory. In the end Gitelman turns to the World Wide Web and asks how the history of the Web is already being told, how the Web might also resist history, and how using the Web might be producing the conditions of its own historicity.

Textual Transgressions

Textual Transgressions
Author: David Greetham
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 636
Release: 2013-10-28
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1136512802

Both an intellectual autobiography and a chronicle of the ideological and methodological upheaval in textual studies during the last two decades, this book presents provocative essays by one of the foremost textual scholars of our day. As founder and executive director of the interdisciplinary Society for Textual Scholarship, Professor Greetham has had the opportunity to observe and engage with the main players of the textual revolution during its most turbulent years and enlivens his account with revealing character sketches.

Proofs of Genius

Proofs of Genius
Author: Amanda Gailey
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 173
Release: 2015-10-19
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0472052756

The first extensive study of the collected edition as an editorial genre and its obscured role in shaping the American literary canon