Reading Theory Now: An ABC of Good Reading with J. Hillis Miller
Autor Dr Eamonn Dunneen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 aug 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441115140
ISBN-10: 1441115145
Pagini: 144
Dimensiuni: 137 x 213 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1441115145
Pagini: 144
Dimensiuni: 137 x 213 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.23 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
A useful lexicon of critical theory for first time students of literary studies
Notă biografică
Dr Éamonn Dunne is a teacher of English at Coláiste Chraobh Abhann school in Kilcoole, Co. Wicklow, Ireland. He is the author of J. Hillis Miller and the Possibilities of Reading: Literature after Deconstruction (2010) and has research interests in pedagogy, popular culture, queer theory and narratology.
Cuprins
Foreword: "Exergue: Miller from A to Z, Or: Miller on Dunne on Miller" by J. Hillis Miller Introduction: "Excursus, Excursus"A (Anacoluthon)B (Beginnings)C (Character)D (Decision)E (Exegesis)F (Figure)G (Graph)H (Hypertext)I (Intersubjectivity)J (Joy)K (Kiss)L (Line)M (Middle)N (Nachträglickeit)O (Others)P (Promise)Q (queer)R (Responsibility)S (Surd)T (Topography)U (Uncanny)V (Virtuality)W (Writing)X (X)Y (Yarn)Z (Zero)Afterword: "ABCing you: Raising the Stakes of/for Reading or, Miller's Tale"by Julian Wolfreys Annotated BibliographyIndex
Recenzii
It would not be unfair to say that Eamonn Dunne knows Hillis Miller better than the eminent critic and literary theorist knows himself. This is another invaluable addition to the secondary literature on Miller. With it Dunne reminds us of the essential nature of Miller's writing for the study of literature today. Reading Reading Theory Now I am persuaded by Dunne that Miller remains our most vital and remarkable thinker of literature; without a familiarity with Miller any training in reading literature would be incomplete. Perhaps, it is where that training should begin. Dunne has rendered us all a great service once more.
Good, good-this is so good a reading of good reading, an alphabetical living out of the good life that is reading. This life has just got better, stranger, strange as ABC.
Eamonn Dunne's ABC, his second book about J. Hillis Miller, operates a kind of a jouissant reading (J is for Joy!), and in that it comes to the proximity of Barthes and Derrida's works on the originary affirmation of reading: both in its conceptual lucidity, and its performative ecstasy. Each letter, each entry from A to Z, feels like a strip of film through which the work of J. Hillis Miller is screened, amplified, projected, embellished, 'seasoned,' sublated and illuminated.
Reading Theory Now: An ABC of Good Reading with J. Hillis Miller is a unique book. The author has grasped the essentials of J. Hillis Miller's theoretical doctrine, critical thinking, and reading strategy. [.] Readers badly need such a book to guide them to have a good reading and correct understanding of Miller's works. In this sense, Reading Theory Now has been published at just the right moment. [...] [T]his book undoubtedly serves as the best guide both to enable those who are already familiar with Miller's works to have a systematic and deeper understanding of his entire works and to encourage those who are just interested in Miller's works to read more of his books. [.] When we read the book, we cannot help feeling as if we are, together with the author and the commentator, having dialogues with Miller. [.] Dunne's book has filled a gap in Miller studies in a comprehensive way. It responds to the pessimistic ideas that theory is dead and that literature is dead. But after reading this book, we cannot help feeling that literature is not dead at all.
Reading Theory Now: An ABC of Good Reading with J. Hillis Miller not only reads Miller reading, but also includes Dunne's own reading of texts. Dunne executes what he attempts to enable his readers to do: he defines the close reading tools Miller uses and shows us how to use them. This double move of reading and application earns praise from Miller himself, who, in a Preface to Dunne's book, lauds Dunne for putting together "the best introduction I know to my work".
Good, good-this is so good a reading of good reading, an alphabetical living out of the good life that is reading. This life has just got better, stranger, strange as ABC.
Eamonn Dunne's ABC, his second book about J. Hillis Miller, operates a kind of a jouissant reading (J is for Joy!), and in that it comes to the proximity of Barthes and Derrida's works on the originary affirmation of reading: both in its conceptual lucidity, and its performative ecstasy. Each letter, each entry from A to Z, feels like a strip of film through which the work of J. Hillis Miller is screened, amplified, projected, embellished, 'seasoned,' sublated and illuminated.
Reading Theory Now: An ABC of Good Reading with J. Hillis Miller is a unique book. The author has grasped the essentials of J. Hillis Miller's theoretical doctrine, critical thinking, and reading strategy. [.] Readers badly need such a book to guide them to have a good reading and correct understanding of Miller's works. In this sense, Reading Theory Now has been published at just the right moment. [...] [T]his book undoubtedly serves as the best guide both to enable those who are already familiar with Miller's works to have a systematic and deeper understanding of his entire works and to encourage those who are just interested in Miller's works to read more of his books. [.] When we read the book, we cannot help feeling as if we are, together with the author and the commentator, having dialogues with Miller. [.] Dunne's book has filled a gap in Miller studies in a comprehensive way. It responds to the pessimistic ideas that theory is dead and that literature is dead. But after reading this book, we cannot help feeling that literature is not dead at all.
Reading Theory Now: An ABC of Good Reading with J. Hillis Miller not only reads Miller reading, but also includes Dunne's own reading of texts. Dunne executes what he attempts to enable his readers to do: he defines the close reading tools Miller uses and shows us how to use them. This double move of reading and application earns praise from Miller himself, who, in a Preface to Dunne's book, lauds Dunne for putting together "the best introduction I know to my work".