Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
New Historicism and Cultural Materialism : Transitions - John Brannigan

New Historicism and Cultural Materialism

By: John Brannigan

Hardcover | 22 June 1998 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Hardcover


RRP $280.00

$262.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $65.69 with

 or 

Ships in 25 to 30 business days

New historicism and cultural materialism emerged in the early 1980s as prominent literary theories and came to represent a revival of interest in history and in historicising literature. Their proponents rejected both formalist criticism and earlier attempts to read literature in its historical context and defined new ways of thinking about literature in relation to history. This study explains the development of these theories and demonstrates both their uses and weaknesses as critical practices. The potential future direction for thetheories is explored and the debates about their validity in literary studies are discussed. The book is for undergraduate students of English Literature; and those on courses in literary theory/cultural studies/Renaissance, 18th-century and Victorian literature/the novel.
Industry Reviews
'Lucid, vivid and fluent, this study presents both new historicism and cultural materialism in a sympathetic manner, while also offering some penetrating criticisms of both movements. The result is a work which manages to introduce these theories to students while at the same time rebuking some of their exponents for an excessive social pessimism. What is offered, therefore, is a truly creative intervention in the developing debate. Dr Brannigan tries at all times to keep open the possible meanings in a text and open also to the range of texts which might be exposed to a particular treatment. He tests the theories against a number of very different works by Joseph Conrad, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Alfred Lord Tennyson and WB Yeats and he tests the chosen texts by the methodologies brought to bear on them. Far from treating these authors' works as illustrations of an a priori argument, Dr Brannigan, like all the best critics, finds in each of them unsuspected layers of meaning. The reading of Yeats, in particular, shows him at his scrupulous best. In the concluding section, Dr Brannigan speculates about likely future trends. In these exhilarating pages, far from proclaiming the triumph of either literature or theory, he effectively explodes the distinction between them. For this book shows how there can be no literature without some theory of art and also that the finest criticism may be raised to the level of artistic utterance. He brings to bear on the newer -isms the same vigilant scepticism which their exponents rightly brought to bear on practical criticism, but he also offers a margin of hope to those who wish to dismantle the lineaments of power in society or in culture.' - Professor Declan Kiberd, University College Dublin

Other Editions and Formats

Paperback

Published: 22nd June 1998

More in Literary Theory

Create Dangerously : Penguin Modern - Albert Camus

RRP $12.00

$11.99

Middlemarch : Collins Classics - George Eliot
How to Read a Book : A Touchstone book - Charles Van Doren

RRP $34.99

$18.75

46%
OFF
Lipstick : Object Lessons - Eileen G'Sell

$32.75

Thought as Experience in Bataille, Cioran, and Rosset - Joseph Acquisto
Camera Lucida : Vintage Classics - Roland Barthes

RRP $26.99

$14.99

44%
OFF
In Love with Love : The Persistence and Joy of Romantic Fiction - Ella Risbridger
Metaphors We Live By - George Lakoff

$34.75

Literary Theory : An Introduction - Terry Eagleton

RRP $38.95

$31.75

18%
OFF
Literacies : 2nd edition - Mary Kalantzis

RRP $145.95

$117.75

19%
OFF