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The turn to reading in twentieth-century literary criticismChapin, Charles Nicholas January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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The Paul de Man Affair: The Presence of the PastJones-Katz, Gregory Robert January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Metaphors of vision and blindness in contemporary critical thoughtPopplestone, Catherina Aletta 22 November 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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The nature of aesthetic perception in literature : the interaction between text and reader in the process of perceiving literary textsWilke, Magdalena Friedericke 11 1900 (has links)
In this dissertation it is argued that literary theories have traditionally extended abundant
attention on authors and texts, neglecting, with very few exceptions, the impor- tant role
of the READER. To address this imbalance, par- ticular attention will be paid to the view of
Wolfgang Iser, that a literary text can only elicit a response when it is read, and that it is
virtually impossible to describe this response without also analysing the READING PROCESS. I
share this view as it makes logical sense: a literary text remains meaningless, a mere 'paper and
ink' production without the
involvement of the reader. It is also the reader's own com- petence, his sense of aesthetic
perception which enables him to make sense of the, in the literary text embedded message, hence the
title: "The Nature of Aesthetic Perception in Literature. The Interaction between Text and
Reader in the Process of Perceiving Literary Texts." / Afrikaans & Theory of Literature / M.A. (Theory of Literature)
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Of poems and propositions : T.S. Eliot and the linguistic turnPierce, April Elisabeth January 2015 (has links)
This thesis describes how Eliot's concern for language and form finds roots in early twentieth century language philosophy. It also explores the way Eliot's early philosophical themes concerning language and meaning reemerge in his literary criticism and philosophical poetry during the 1920s and 1930s, and in his more explicitly philosophical Four Quartets. More significantly, this thesis historically elucidates Eliot's debt to the philosophies of Edmund Husserl and Bertrand Russell, reframing his philosophy within the two poles of the "Linguistic Turn". By closely examining Eliot's unpublished and only recently published essays and notes, the thesis unearths probable connections between Eliot's own philosophical interests and his later poetics, redefining his legacy as a prototypical modernist poet, and suggesting a new framework of study for scholars and students of literary modernism.
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The nature of aesthetic perception in literature : the interaction between text and reader in the process of perceiving literary textsWilke, Magdalena Friedericke 11 1900 (has links)
In this dissertation it is argued that literary theories have traditionally extended abundant
attention on authors and texts, neglecting, with very few exceptions, the impor- tant role
of the READER. To address this imbalance, par- ticular attention will be paid to the view of
Wolfgang Iser, that a literary text can only elicit a response when it is read, and that it is
virtually impossible to describe this response without also analysing the READING PROCESS. I
share this view as it makes logical sense: a literary text remains meaningless, a mere 'paper and
ink' production without the
involvement of the reader. It is also the reader's own com- petence, his sense of aesthetic
perception which enables him to make sense of the, in the literary text embedded message, hence the
title: "The Nature of Aesthetic Perception in Literature. The Interaction between Text and
Reader in the Process of Perceiving Literary Texts." / Afrikaans and Theory of Literature / M.A. (Theory of Literature)
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Labyrinths, legends, legions: an allergory of reading.Cruddas, Leora Anne January 1996 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts, University of the
Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the
degree of Master of Arts in Engiish. / This dissertation grapples With the activity of critical production. It answers
not to an interpretation which would constitute the writer within the
institutionalised category of effect and object of knowledge, but rather to an
explosion, a proliferation of critical paths at the limit of the doxa: a veritable
labyrinth.
The terms of my title open up a methodological field within which I enact the
play of associations, contiguities, relations among four texts: The Name of
the Rose, lost. in the Funhouse, The Naked Lunch and 'The library of
Babel'. The terms themselves disseminate across the text argument
in citations, references, echoes. The labyrinth is used throughout as a trope
which deconstructs its own performance within the text. Legends are
myths, inscriptions on maps, legenda or "things for reading" (through an
etymological supplement), "lesser libraries." Barthes cites the biblical words
of the man possessed by demons: "My name is Legion for we are many"
and demonstrates how the demonlacal plural brings with it fundamental
changes in reading strategies.
The notion of the demoniacal plural is used to problernatlse the debates
around subjectivity. The belief in unitary, rational selfhood is debunked and
the subject is Seen to be plural, irreducible, heterogenous. Subjectivity is
further problernatlsed by demonstrating the slippage among the labyrinthine
multiplicity of discursive positions occupied by readers: the monoloqlcal
models of meaning developed from each reading position constantly shift.
The discursive position recuperated and sanctioned by the Law or the
institution is impossible to maintain as Subjects are seduced by language
into confrontation with other positions through their continuous renarnings of
each other. Subjectivity and discursive positioning form .their own
labyrinthine intentionality.
The argument then moves towards an exploration of the current calculation
of the subject for the writer. (Distinctions between author and critic begin to
collapse here since meaning is shown to be governed by neither). The
reading\writing subject strolls in a vast labyrinth of text - a postmodern
flaneur who frustrates the work of exegesis by enacting the play of the
signifier. The line traced by this hypothetical traveller does not engender a
definitive theoretical or discursive map of the domain but rather a contingent
and highly provisional, backward turning path.
The demoniacal plural is also used to problematise notions of an original
and innovative critical voice which "speaks" the dissertation. The logic
regulating the argument is the already-written, The dissertation plavs with
each text (both critical texts and fictions) looking for a practice which
reproduces them but in another place.
My imagined (ideal?) reader wmtreat the argument as that Which. lt was not
simply meant to be,will. follow.the argument and be seduced by it: an
echoing. structure with dead ends, wrong turns, false entrances fictitious
exits; misleading threads and deceptive lines, / AC 2018
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