The Eagleton Reader
Blackwell Readers

1. Auflage Dezember 1997
472 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
ISBN:
978-0-631-20248-6
John Wiley & Sons
This is the first collection of Terry Eagleton's work for the theatre - St Oscar, The White, the Gold and the Gangrene, Disappearances, and God's Locusts.
Acknowledgements.
Preface.
Part I: Literary Criticism:.
Introduction.
1. The Novels of D. H. Lawrence.
2. Nature and the Fall in Hopkins: A Reading of 'God's Grandeur'
(1973).
3. Thomas Hardy and Jude the Obscure (1974).
4. Wuthering Heights (1975).
5. Shakespeare and the Letter of the Law (1986).
6. Tony Harrison's V (1986).
7. Estrangement and Irony in the Fiction of Milan Kundera
(1987).
Part II: Cultural Politics/Sexual Politics:.
Introduction.
8. The Idea of a Common Culture (1967).
9. Tennyson: Politics and Sexuality in The Princess and
In Memoriam (1978).
10. The Rape of Clarissa (1982).
11. The Crisis in Contemporary Culture (1992).
12. Body Work (1993).
Part III: Marxism and Critical Theory:.
Introduction.
13. Ideology and Literary Form (1976).
14. Walter Benjamin: Towards a Revolutionary Criticism
(1981).
15. Human Rights and Deconstruction (1992).
16. Ideology (1994).
17. Marxist Literary Theory (1995).
18. Marxism without Marxism: Jacques Derrida and Specters of
Marx (1995).
Part IV: Modernism and Postmodernism:.
Introduction.
19. The End of English (1987).
20. Modernism, Myth, and Monopoly Capitalism (1989).
21. Defending the Free World (1990).
22. The Right and the Good: Postmodernism and the Liberal State
(1994).
Part V: Friends and Philosophers:.
Introduction.
23. Resources for a Journey of Hope: Raymond Williams
(1989).
24. The Death of Desire: Arthur Schopenhauer (1990).
25. My Wittgenstein (1994).
Part VI: Ireland's Own:.
Introduction.
26. History and Myth in Yeats's 'Easter' 1916 (1971).
27. Nationalism: Irony and Commitment (1988).
28. Saint Oscar (1989).
29. Unionism and Utopia: The Cure at Troy by Seamus
Heaney (1991).
30. Heathcliff and the Great Hunger (1995).
The Ballad of Marxist Criticism.
Bibliography.
Index.
Preface.
Part I: Literary Criticism:.
Introduction.
1. The Novels of D. H. Lawrence.
2. Nature and the Fall in Hopkins: A Reading of 'God's Grandeur'
(1973).
3. Thomas Hardy and Jude the Obscure (1974).
4. Wuthering Heights (1975).
5. Shakespeare and the Letter of the Law (1986).
6. Tony Harrison's V (1986).
7. Estrangement and Irony in the Fiction of Milan Kundera
(1987).
Part II: Cultural Politics/Sexual Politics:.
Introduction.
8. The Idea of a Common Culture (1967).
9. Tennyson: Politics and Sexuality in The Princess and
In Memoriam (1978).
10. The Rape of Clarissa (1982).
11. The Crisis in Contemporary Culture (1992).
12. Body Work (1993).
Part III: Marxism and Critical Theory:.
Introduction.
13. Ideology and Literary Form (1976).
14. Walter Benjamin: Towards a Revolutionary Criticism
(1981).
15. Human Rights and Deconstruction (1992).
16. Ideology (1994).
17. Marxist Literary Theory (1995).
18. Marxism without Marxism: Jacques Derrida and Specters of
Marx (1995).
Part IV: Modernism and Postmodernism:.
Introduction.
19. The End of English (1987).
20. Modernism, Myth, and Monopoly Capitalism (1989).
21. Defending the Free World (1990).
22. The Right and the Good: Postmodernism and the Liberal State
(1994).
Part V: Friends and Philosophers:.
Introduction.
23. Resources for a Journey of Hope: Raymond Williams
(1989).
24. The Death of Desire: Arthur Schopenhauer (1990).
25. My Wittgenstein (1994).
Part VI: Ireland's Own:.
Introduction.
26. History and Myth in Yeats's 'Easter' 1916 (1971).
27. Nationalism: Irony and Commitment (1988).
28. Saint Oscar (1989).
29. Unionism and Utopia: The Cure at Troy by Seamus
Heaney (1991).
30. Heathcliff and the Great Hunger (1995).
The Ballad of Marxist Criticism.
Bibliography.
Index.
"Every student of English will be thankful to Regan for assembling
this Reader. Useful essays frame each section and the
collection as a whole serves as a splendid introduction to
Eagleton's work. His delightful wit and debunking similes make
reading him fun, as well as necessary."
Gary Day, Times Higher Education Supplement "As this
anthology makes clear, Eagleton's work has been held together for
nearly 20 years by a startling proposal for the reform of the
academic syllabus."
"If the humanities are to be rescued from their current state of
over-specialised torpor, then Eagleton's work will be one of the
main sources to which the reformers will turn." Morning Star
this Reader. Useful essays frame each section and the
collection as a whole serves as a splendid introduction to
Eagleton's work. His delightful wit and debunking similes make
reading him fun, as well as necessary."
Gary Day, Times Higher Education Supplement "As this
anthology makes clear, Eagleton's work has been held together for
nearly 20 years by a startling proposal for the reform of the
academic syllabus."
"If the humanities are to be rescued from their current state of
over-specialised torpor, then Eagleton's work will be one of the
main sources to which the reformers will turn." Morning Star
Stephen Regan is a Lecturer in Literature at the Open University and was formerly tutor at Ruskin College, Oxford. Founding editor of The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory, published by Blackwell for the English Association, he is also editor of The Politics of Pleasure: Aesthetics and Cultural Theory (1992). He also teaches Modern Irish Literature and Critical Theory for the Department of Continuing Education at Oxford University.