Description |
1 online resource |
Contents |
Introduction : Modernist criticism and the meaning of meaning -- Annotation : T.S. Eliot and marginal commentary -- Experiment : I.A. Richards and critical bathos -- Emendation : William Empson and the textual crux -- Paraphrase : William Empson's cheerful heresies -- Circumlocution : R.P. Blackmur's failures of style -- Parataxis : Marianne Moore's reticent sentences -- Conclusion : Feedforward-feedback |
Summary |
'Radical Empiricists' presents a new history of criticism in the first half of the twentieth-century, against the backdrop of the modernist crisis of meaning. It turns close reading back on itself, proposing innovative readings of the prose of five major modernist poet-critics: I.A. Richards, T.S. Eliot, William Empson, R.P. Blackmur, and Marianne Moore. For each critic, it identifies characteristic patterns of prose and techniques of reading, from annotation to parataxis |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Online resource; title from title page (Oxford Scholarship, viewed October 12, 2015) |
Subject |
Criticism -- History -- 20th century
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Modernism (Literature)
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LITERARY CRITICISM -- Semiotics & Theory.
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Criticism.
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Modernism (Literature)
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Literary Criticism -- History -- 20th century.
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Modernism.
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Genre/Form |
History.
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9780191804090 |
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0191804096 |
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9780191061707 |
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0191061700 |
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