The Continuity of Poetic Language
Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 1951
Total Pages: 564
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKStudies in English Poetry from the 1540's to the 1940'sDonated by Frank Mattson.
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Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 1951
Total Pages: 564
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKStudies in English Poetry from the 1540's to the 1940'sDonated by Frank Mattson.
Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2022-09-23
Total Pages: 568
ISBN-13: 0520348974
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1951.
Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher:
Published: 1965
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Rachel Sagner Buurma
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 2020-12-04
Total Pages: 317
ISBN-13: 022673627X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Teaching Archive shows us a series of major literary thinkers in a place we seldom remember them inhabiting: the classroom. Rachel Sagner Buurma and Laura Heffernan open up “the teaching archive”—the syllabuses, course descriptions, lecture notes, and class assignments—of critics and scholars including T. S. Eliot, Caroline Spurgeon, I. A. Richards, Edith Rickert, J. Saunders Redding, Edmund Wilson, Cleanth Brooks, Josephine Miles, and Simon J. Ortiz. This new history of English rewrites what we know about the discipline by showing how students helped write foundational works of literary criticism and how English classes at community colleges and HBCUs pioneered the reading methods and expanded canons that came only belatedly to the Ivy League. It reminds us that research and teaching, which institutions often imagine as separate, have always been intertwined in practice. In a contemporary moment of humanities defunding, the casualization of teaching, and the privatization of pedagogy, The Teaching Archive offers a more accurate view of the work we have done in the past and must continue to do in the future.
Author: Veronica Forrest-Thomson
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Published: 1978
Total Pages: 190
ISBN-13: 9780719007149
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Christopher Rovee
Publisher: Fordham Univ Press
Published: 2024-01-02
Total Pages: 197
ISBN-13: 1531505139
DOWNLOAD EBOOKNew Critical Nostalgia weighs the future of literary study by reassessing its past. It tracks today's impassioned debates about method back to the discipline’s early professional era, when an unprecedented makeover of American higher education with far-reaching social consequences resulted in what we might call our first crisis of academic life. Rovee probes literary study’s nostalgic attachments to this past, by recasting an essential episode in the historiography of English—the vigorous rejection of romanticism by American New Critics—in the new light of the American university’s tectonic growth. In the process, he demonstrates literary study’s profound investment in romanticism and reveals the romantic lyric’s special affect, nostalgia, as having been part of English’s professional identity all along. New Critical Nostalgia meticulously shows what is lost in reducing mid-century American criticism and the intense, quirky, and unpredictable writings of central figures, such as Cleanth Brooks, Josephine Miles, and W. K. Wimsatt, to a glib monolith of New Critical anti-romanticism. In Rovee’s historically rich account, grounded in analysis of critical texts and enlivened by archival study, readers discover John Crowe Ransom’s and William Wordsworth’s shared existential nostalgia, witness the demolition of the “immature” Percy Shelley in the revolutionary textbook Understanding Poetry, explore the classroom give-and-take prompted by the close reading of John Keats, consider the strange ambivalence toward Lord Byron on the part of formalist critics and romantic scholars alike, and encounter the strikingly contemporary quantitative studies by one of the mid-century’s preeminent poetry scholars, Josephine Miles. These complex and enthralling engagements with the romantic lyric introduce the reader to a dynamic intellectual milieu, in which professionals with varying methodological commitments (from New Critics to computationalists), working in radically different academic locales (from Nashville and New Haven to Baton Rouge and Berkeley), wrangled over what it means to read, with nothing less than the future of the discipline at stake.
Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 1974-01-01
Total Pages: 260
ISBN-13: 9780520025547
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: C. Billitteri
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2009-04-13
Total Pages: 238
ISBN-13: 023062040X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book takes up the utopian desire for a perfect language of words that give direct expression to the real, known in Western thought as Cratylism, and its impact on the social visions and poetic projects of three of the most intellectually ambitious of American writers: Walt Whitman, Laura (Riding) Jackson, and Charles Olson.
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1995
Total Pages: 602
ISBN-13:
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