Selected Product: | Literary Criticism: An Introduction to Theory and Practice Paperback Edition: 4th Author: Charles E. Bressler Publisher: Prentice Hall Release Date: 2006-08-05 ISBN-10: 0131534483 ISBN-13: 9780131534483 List Price: $61.00 Average Customer Rating: | | MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, Sixth Edition ISBN-10: 0873529863 ISBN-13: 9780873529860 List Price:$17.50 The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism ISBN-10: 0393974294 ISBN-13: 9780393974294 List Price:$71.25 Handbook to Literature, A (11th Edition) (Handbook to Literature) ISBN-10: 0136014399 ISBN-13: 9780136014393 List Price:$50.80 Beginning Theory: An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory ISBN-10: 0719062683 ISBN-13: 9780719062681 List Price:$24.95 Reading and Writing from Literature ISBN-10: 061845411X ISBN-13: 9780618454112 List Price:$92.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Literary Criticism: An Introduction to Theory and Practice by Charles E. Bressler (ISBN-10: 0131534483, ISBN-13: 9780131534483). At this time we have not yet written a review for Literary Criticism: An Introduction to Theory and Practice by Charles E. Bressler (ISBN-10: 0131534483, ISBN-13: 9780131534483). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com An Extraordinarily Useful Text On Theory | Customer Rating: | The number of user-friendly guides for introductory level literary theory is no more than three or four. LITERARY THEORY: AN INTRODUCTION TO THEORY AND PRACTICE by Charles E. Bressler is happily one of them. For a text on theory designed for the novice, the author must include a number of basic concepts. First, the text must minimize the inevitable influx of dense jargon while maximizing a clear explication of that jargon. Second, the author must set his survey of theory in a meaningful context that allows the uninitiated to trace the evolution of theory from its starting point--usually with the Greeks--up to the present day. Third, the author must define the nature of theory--no easy task there--so that the reader can connect the various strands of allied disciplines like linguistics, psychology, and economics into a coherent whole. Fourth, the text must include close analyses and summaries of the major schools of theory--again no easy task since there is considerable disagreement even among those who are recognized experts as to which strands of the web of theory deserve inclusion. And finally, that author ought to show the reader how to make the transcendent leap from the abstruseness that is theory to the concretization of the use of that theory by providing real-life examples of writing that illustrate that theory in action. Bressler does all this and does so with a flair that puts most of his academic competitors to shame.
Part of the reason for his success is his simple yet not simplistic methodology that accompanies each school of theory. He begins each school with an introduction that foregrounds his analyses in a real-world application that makes sense even to the rank novice. He follows with an erudite historical development, which includes assumptions that proponents of that school hold. He then considers the methodology by which that proponent translates abstract assumption to concrete reality. What I found especially useful were his concluding questions for analyses and student-derived essays that examined a specific text under a designated literary lens.
There are other introductory guides that do much of the preceding but only Bressler does it all so well. This text has use beyond the introductory undergraduate course in theory. For those in graduate seminars who need a refresher in the basics or wish to see theory reflected in the reality of everyday literary texts, LITERARY THEORY is a work that ought to achieve frequent perusal during a lifetime of reading that extends far beyond the requirements of a college course. | too many typos in 4th edition | Customer Rating: | | After looking at the third edition, I ordered this book for a class that I teach. The fourth edition contains many changes, all of them for the worse. The literary selections in the 4th edition are not as well chosen; the added paragraphs in the chapters on New Criticism and feminism are stylistically awkward and often confusing and repetitive, not to mention factually questionable (the claim that there were no voices in feminism between Pisan and Wollstonecraft!). Most distressing of all, this edition was apparently rushed to press in time for classes in fall 2006, for it contains typos about every five or six pages. The chapter on feminism alone has at least ten errors, e.g., "one in the same," "least" instead of "lest" (that mistake was carried over from the third edition), "lastest"!!!, inconsistency in verb number after "a variety of [plural nouns]," etc. The publisher should send an apology to all purchasers of this book, along with a list of errata. On the bright side: I tell my students that I can't penalize them too much for small errors, when the textbook contains so many! | Excellent guide for beginners. | Customer Rating: | 4 years of English studies, and I never once sat down to read literary theory until I had to take a course in it. Bressler's book helped me immensely to sort out the confusing mass that is theory. He lists a dozen or so major movements, such as formalism, reader-response criticism, structuralism, and post-structuralism, and also includes "additional" chapters on individual theorists such as Barthes, Levi-Strauss, etc. The explanations are concise. I also like how this professor turned author looks at theory from the student's perspective: he breaks down complicated ideas into manageable parts, without losing the essential point of the theory.
Another book that I found helpful was *Literary Theory: An Anthology* ed. Julie Rivkin. Unlike Bressler's book, this one is HUGE and very heavy, but nonetheless useful.
Actually, after reading more about literary theory, I'm no longer scared of it. So, if you're like me, a "newbie" to literary theory, you'd do well to start with this book. | worth every penny | Customer Rating: | | This is truly a beautiful book- it should be a bestseller. I am very happy to have purchased and read it. | Must-Have for Anyone with an interest in Literary Criticism | Customer Rating: | | Literary Criticism is one field of study that, no doubt, confuses most people with all the "-isms". Charles Bressler's book is a very useful tool in sorting out all these "-isms". This is a well-organized book: each chapter focuses on a different theory and discusses the theory's historical development, assumptions, methodology and even has questions for analysis (great help when writing a paper). The chapter culminates in two essays of application of that particular theory. This is the most popular and widely-circulated book among Lit Majors in my university. And this is one that you should definitely own. |
|