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Never Ones For Theory

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The story of how 20th-century English scholars pioneered the study of literary theory years in advance of France or the USA.The British have often denied the very existence of a tradition of Englis...
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  • 18 January 2001
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The story of how 20th-century English scholars pioneered the study of literary theory years in advance of France or the USA.

The British have often denied the very existence of a tradition of English literary theory. George Watson redeems that denial in his latest book, the first study of 20th Century English theory. The book begins with Yeats, Pound and Eliot, who made England their home. In subsequent chapters, based on personal recollection as well as published sources, it assesses the contribution of I.A. Richards, William Empson, F.R. Leavis, C.S. Lewis, Isaiah Berlin and Wittgenstein, as well as Marxists like E.P. Thompson and Raymond Williams. English literary theory is a tradition that has suffered in reputation, paradoxically, by the sheer fertility of its invention. In this seminal work the author celebrates that fertility from the First World War down to the death of Iris Murdoch in 1999, showing that England pioneered the academic study of theories of literature years in advance of France or the USA.
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Price: $52.95
Pages: 144
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date: 18 January 2001
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9780718830090
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / General, Literature: history and criticism
REVIEWS Icon
Watson's emphasis that 'theory' was happening in England, and particularly in Cambridge, long before it became widely popular elsewhere - is a welcome one, not least in its defiance of those who would describe English criticisms as parochial or "gentlemanly-amateurish.
— Bharat Tandon
Achnowledgements
Preface

1. Never ones for theory?
2. Pound and Yeats
3. Eliot in Cambridge
4. I.A. Richards
5. William Empson
6. F.R. Leavis
7. C.S. Lewis
8. Isaiah Berlin
9. Iris Murdoch
10. E.P. Thompson
11. Raymond Williams
12. Wittgenstein's last word

Index