Literary communication as dialogue responsibilities and pleasures in post-postmodern times : selected papers, 2003-2020
"As traced by Roger D. Sell, literary communication is a process of community-making. As long as literary authors and those responding to them respect each other's human autonomy, literature flourishes as an enjoyable, though often challenging mode of interaction that is truly dialogical i...
| Главный автор: | |
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| Формат: | Электронная книга |
| Язык: | English |
| Публикация: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
2020.
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| Серии: | FILLM studies in languages and literatures,
volume 14 |
| Предметы: | |
| Online-ссылка: | EBSCOhost Перейти в каталог НБ ТГУ |
Оглавление:
- Intro
- Literary Communication as Dialogue
- Editorial page
- FILLM Advisory Board
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Series editor's preface
- Acknowlegements
- Introduction
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 4.
- 5.
- 6.
- Chapter 1. Postmodernity, literary pragmatics, mediating criticism: Meanings within a large circle of communicants
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- 4.
- 5.
- 6.
- 7.
- 8.
- 9.
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 2. What is literary communication and what is a literary community?
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 3. Gadamer, Habermas, and a re-humanized literary scholarship
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 4. Sir John Beaumont and his three audiences
- 1. Biographical considerations
- 2. The broadest audience
- 3. The audience of fellow-Catholics
- 4. The audience of potential converts in high places
- Chapter 5. Dialogicality and ethics: Four cases of literary address
- 1. Towards a humanized dialogue analysis
- 2. The dialogicality of literature
- 3. An autobiographer's address
- 4. A poet's address
- 5. A novelist's address
- 6. A dramatist's address
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 6. Encouraging the readers of tomorrow: Books and empathy
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 7. Dialogue versus silencing: Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
- 1. A communicational tyrant?
- 2. The invitation to readers of The Rime
- 3. Readers' responses
- 4. Green values
- 5. The conversational readjustment of 1817
- 6. The continuing conversation
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 8. Cultural memory and the communicational criticism of literature
- 1. Communicational criticism
- 2. Cultural memory
- 3. Negative capability: Postmodern novelists
- 4. Varieties of community-making: An early modern poet
- 5. Cultural memory and communication
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 9. Herbert's considerateness: A communicational assessment
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 10. In dialogue with the ageing Wordsworth
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 11. A communicational criticism for post-postmodern times
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 12. Review: Till Kinzel and Jarmila Mildorf (eds). Imaginary dialogues in American literature and philosophy: Beyond the mainstream
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 13. Political and hedonic re-contextualizations: Prince Charles's Spanish journey in Beaumont, Jonson, and Middleton
- 1. History
- 2. Formal features
- 3. Dialogicality
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 14. Where do literary authors belong?: A post-postmodern answer
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 15. Honour dishonoured: The communicational workings of early Stuart tragedy and tragi-comedy
- 1. Massinger's The Roman Actor
- 2. Plays by Middleton, Chapman, Beaumont and Fletcher, Webster, and Ford
- 3. Epilogue
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 16. Dialogue and literature
- 1. Introduction
