Is Shakespeare any Good? reveals why certain literary works and authors are treated as superior to others, and questions the literary establishment's criteria for creating an imperium of "great" writers.
Enables readers to articulate and formulate their own arguments about the quality of literature - including works that convention forbids us to dislike
Dismantles the claims of academic criticism - particularly Theory - to tell us anything useful about why we like or appreciate literature
Challenges and shatters many longstanding beliefs about literature and its evaluation
Poses serious questions about the value of literature, and studying literature, and presents these in a lively and entertainingly provocative manner
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Enables readers to articulate and formulate their own arguments about the quality of literature - including works that convention forbids us to dislike
Dismantles the claims of academic criticism - particularly Theory - to tell us anything useful about why we like or appreciate literature
Challenges and shatters many longstanding beliefs about literature and its evaluation
Poses serious questions about the value of literature, and studying literature, and presents these in a lively and entertainingly provocative manner
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
"Is Shakespeare any Good? is refreshingly honest and controversial, a lucid and sometimes startling assessment of what makes literature literature, as well as a much-needed breath of fresh air within the locked room of literary study. This volume constitutes a vital contribution to the ongoing debate on literary aesthetics and proposes an entirely new methodology for the study of literature as well as a convincing apology for English as a subject. Bradford has a gift for making complex ideas simple and shining light into dark corners."--Madelena Gonzalez, University of Avingnon
'Richard Bradford has produced a pugnacious and carefully constructed critique of modern attitudes to the vexed question of how we should set about evaluating literary texts. Its insistence on the desirability of that much maligned abstract 'taste' is thoroughly to be applauded.'--D. J. Taylor, Author of Orwell: The Life, winner of the Whitbread Biography Prize.
'Richard Bradford has produced a pugnacious and carefully constructed critique of modern attitudes to the vexed question of how we should set about evaluating literary texts. Its insistence on the desirability of that much maligned abstract 'taste' is thoroughly to be applauded.'--D. J. Taylor, Author of Orwell: The Life, winner of the Whitbread Biography Prize.