Description
About the Author
Gary Day is Principal Lecturer in English at De Montfort University. His previous publications include Re-Reading Leavis: Culture and Literary Criticism (1996) and Class (2001). He has contributed to The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism and for a number of years has had a satirical column in the Times Higher Education.
Reviews
Day is exuberantly readable; his synthetic competence seems informed by the skills of a good teacher... He is impatient with designer theory, and his lightness of touch is heroic in the presence of hugely intractable and diverse material from the past. With these qualities he has constructed a book that will appeal to students and scholars alike, one that will make much visible that was previously shrouded in the occult art of telling the truth about the critical past -- as far as such truth can be told. -- Philip Smallwood Times Higher Education Literary Criticism is remarkably extensive in terms of its range... [It] makes the convincing case that the co-existing tendencies of rhetoric and grammar serve to structure the whole field of literary criticism -- 18/1 Literature and History [Literary Criticism] is an insightful, absorbing and provocative account of the development of theories in the West in the last twenty-four centuries... This book is written in an engaging style and it is enlivened by interesting tidbits about critics and their times. It provides a comprehensive bibliography of both primary and secondary sources chapter-wise... of immense use to students who want to pursue their inquiry further. East West Journal of Humanities This heavyweight study reminds us that theories of literature have been around for as long as literature itself -- from the Greco-Roman classics onwards. Anyone with a serious interest in literary criticism will find this a stimulating antidote to contemporary silliness. Mantex Day is exuberantly readable; his synthetic competence seems informed by the skills of a good teacher... He is impatient with designer theory, and his lightness of touch is heroic in the presence of hugely intractable and diverse material from the past. With these qualities he has constructed a book that will appeal to students and scholars alike, one that will make much visible that was previously shrouded in the occult art of telling the truth about the critical past -- as far as such truth can be told. Literary Criticism is remarkably extensive in terms of its range... [It] makes the convincing case that the co-existing tendencies of rhetoric and grammar serve to structure the whole field of literary criticism [Literary Criticism] is an insightful, absorbing and provocative account of the development of theories in the West in the last twenty-four centuries... This book is written in an engaging style and it is enlivened by interesting tidbits about critics and their times. It provides a comprehensive bibliography of both primary and secondary sources chapter-wise... of immense use to students who want to pursue their inquiry further. This heavyweight study reminds us that theories of literature have been around for as long as literature itself -- from the Greco-Roman classics onwards. Anyone with a serious interest in literary criticism will find this a stimulating antidote to contemporary silliness.
Book Information
ISBN 9780748641420
Author Gary E. Day
Format Paperback
Page Count 352
Imprint Edinburgh University Press
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Weight(grams) 528g