The evolution and manipulation of language from the celebrated author of After Babel. “A keenly discriminating literary mind at work on what it loves” (The ...
Continue Reading →For the past four decades Frank Kermode, critic and writer, has steadily established himself as one of the most brilliant minds of his generation. Questioning ...
Continue Reading →The question of the canon has been the subject of debate in academic circles for over fifteen years. Pleasure and Change contains two lectures on ...
Continue Reading →Sir Frank Kermode, the British scholar, instructor, and author, was an inspired critic. Forms of Attention is based on a series of three lectures he ...
Continue Reading →This paper examines the relationship between critical reading and the critical object in the work of Canadian poet and essayist Anne Carson, primarily the texts ...
Continue Reading →In influx & efflux Jane Bennett pursues a question that was bracketed in her book Vibrant Matter: how to think about human agency in a ...
Continue Reading →One of contemporary literature’s most original and affecting fiction writers, Angela Carter also wrote brilliant nonfiction. Shaking a Leg comprises the best of her essays ...
Continue Reading →Hélène Cixous chronicles the last six months of her mother’s life, transgressing the mother-daughter relation in the experience of dying Mother Homer is Dead was ...
Continue Reading →Marjorie Perloff, among our foremost critics of twentieth-century poetry, argues that Ludwig Wittgenstein provided writers with a radical new aesthetic, a key to recognizing the ...
Continue Reading →Michael W. Clune is an American writer and critic. His creative and critical writing has appeared in Harper’s, Salon, Granta, PMLA, the New Yorker, and ...
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