1st Edition

Texts and Textuality Textual Instability, Theory, and Interpretation

By Philip G. Cohen Copyright 1997
    354 Pages
    by Routledge

    354 Pages
    by Routledge

    These essays deal with the scholarly study of the genesis, transmission, and editorial reconstitution of texts by exploring the connections between textual instability and textual theory, interpretation, and pedagogy.
    What makes this collection unique is that each essay brings a different theoretical orientation-New Historicism, Poststructuralism, or Feminism-to bear upon a different text, such as Whitman's Leaves of Grass, Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury, or hypertext fiction, to explore the dialectical relationship between texts and textuality.
    The essays bring some of the textual theories that compete with each other today into contact with a broad range of primarily literary textual histories. That texts are intrinsically unstable, frequently consisting of a series of determinate historical versions, has consequences for all students of literature, because different versions of a literary work frequently help shape different readings independently of the interpretations brought to bear upon them. Textual instability of the works is relevant to our understanding of how the meanings of texts are generated. The contributors build on the numerous challenges to the Anglo-American editorial tradition mounted during the past decade by scholars as diverse as Jerome McGann, D.F. McKenzie, Peter Shillingsburg, D.C. Greetham, Hershel Parker, and Hans Walter Gabler. The volume contributes to the paradigm shift in textual scholarship inaugurated by these scholars. Index.

    Acknowledgments, Textual Instability, Literary Studies, and Recent Developments in Textual Scholarship, Oral Tradition into Textuality, Reading in and around Piers Plowman, Context and Text: Navajo Nightway Textual History in the Hands of the West, The Tongues of the learned are insufficient: Phillis Wheatley, Publishing Objectives, and Personal Liberty, Hideous Progenies: Texts of Frankenstein, My thought is undressed: Some Theoretical Implications of the Texts of Dickinson's Poems, Multiple Editorial Horizons of Leaves of Grass, A Very Different Dance: Intention, Technique, and Revision in Henry James's New York Edition, Discourse versus Authorship: The Baedeker Travel Guide and D. H. Lawrence's Twilight in Italy, The Key to the Whole Book: Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury, the Compson Appendix, and Textual Instability, The Rhetoric of Interactive Fiction, Converging (or Colliding) Traditions: Integrating Hypertext into Literary Studies, Notes on Contributors, Notes

    Biography

    Philip G. Cohen