1st Edition

Twentieth Century Literary Criticism A Reader

By David Lodge Copyright 1959
    704 Pages
    by Routledge

    704 Pages
    by Routledge

    Twentieth Century Literary Criticism is a major anthology of key representative works by fifty leading modern literary critics writing before the structuralist revolution. It is a companion volume to Modern Criticism and Theory (Longman 1988), also edited by David Lodge, which anthologises contemporary criticism as it has developed through structuralism and post-structuralist theory. Together these volumes provide the most comprehensive survey available of traditional and radical literary theory in action.

    The critics collected together in this volume have been drawn from England, America and Europe, and each essay has been prefaced by an editor's introduction which suggests the historical and methodological significance of the piece and gives bibliographical and biographical information.

    This writers collected are:
    M. H. Abrams, W. B. Yeats, Sigmund Freud,Henry James, Ezra Pound, T. S Eliot, Virginia Woolf, T.E. Hulme, I. A. Richards, D. H. Lawrence, E. M. Forster, William Empson, G. Wilson Hight, C. G. Jung, Maud Bodkin, Christopher Caudwell, L. C. Knights, John Crowe Ransom, Edmund Wilson, Paul Valéry, D. W. Harding, Lionel Trilling, Cleanth Brooks, Yvor Wiinters, Erich Auerbach, W. K. Wimsatt and Monroe C. Beardsley, George Orwell, Jean-Paul Sartre, Mark Schorer, Francis Fergusson, Northrop Frye, C. S. Lewis, Leslie Fielder, Alain Robbe-Grillet, George Lukács, Richard Hoggart, Walter J. Ong, Norman O. Brown, Ian Watt, Claude Lévi-Strauss, René Welleck, Wayne Booth, Raymond Williams, R. S. Crane, Marshall McLuhan, George Steiner, Susan Sontag, W. H. Auden, Frank Kermode.

    Foreword  Part I. Formal criticism - structural and rhetorical analysis - 'New criticism' - literary techniques and conventions  Part II. Literary History - history of ideas  Part III. Criticism of literature in its social and political contexts - Marxist criticism - cultural history and analysis  Part IV. Myth criticism - archetypes and the collective unconscious  Part V. Psycho-analytical approaches  Part VI. Prescriptive criticism - credos and manifesoes

    Biography

    David Lodge is an English author and literary critic, previously Professor of English Literature at the University of Birmingham until 1987.