2006 Literature Cat.Qxp

2006 Literature Cat.Qxp

2006 Literature & Literature Compass 2 Literary Theory Catalogue General Literature 3 Literary Theory 7 Literary Theory & Criticism 9 Postcolonialism 10 NEW BOOKS Race, Gender, Sexuality and Identity 11 KEY BACKLIST Critical Thought 12 BESTSELLERS Classical Literature 13 KEY REFERENCE Old Norse-Icelandic Literature 15 JOURNALS Old & Middle English 15 English Renaissance Literature 19 Shakespeare 21 Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-century English Literature 24 Romanticism 26 Victorian Literature 27 Twentieth-century & Contemporary How to use this interactive catalogue: English Literature 28 Clicking on the page numbers in the American Literature 31 contents list will take you straight to that European Literature 36 section. Literature, Film and Performance / Manuscript Studies 37 Click on a book or journal title, cover image or URL to take you to the History of English 38 corresponding page on the Blackwell English Language 38 Publishing website. Religious Literature 39 Blackwell Publishing is not responsible for Blackwell Manifestos 40 the content of external websites. Index 42 LITERATURE COMPASS LITERATURE Literature Compass Literature Series In an effort to help students and 2 100 specially commissioned, peer-reviewed researchers assimilate the vast from Blackwell amount of primary research in the survey articles per year Publishing discipline, LITERATURE COMPASS is 2 Fast, continuous publication being launched as part of three new online survey journals in the 2 International editorial team Blackwell Annotated Anthologies humanities and social sciences. See pages 19, 25 & 27 2 Broad scope - each journal covers an entire LITERATURE COMPASS publishes Blackwell Anthologies authoritative overviews of the most discipline See pages 7, 8, 16, 18, 19, 21, 24, 26, important and interesting research 28 & 32 in the discipline. Anyone who 2 Articles suitable for advanced teaching and Blackwell Companions to needs a quick introduction to a research Literature and Culture new area will benefit from the See pages 3, 5, 6, 9, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, accessible style of LITERATURE 2 Open URL and Crossref linking 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 30, 31, 32, COMPASS articles. The broad scope 33, 34, 35 & 37 of LITERATURE COMPASS enables 2 COUNTER compliant readers to escape traditional Blackwell Critical Biographies boundaries and search across the Visit www.literature-compass.com for further See pages 24, 25 & 26 entire discipline to make information! Blackwell Essential Literature interesting connections between See page 26 sub-disciplines. Blackwell Guides to Criticism See pages 18, 23, 26 & 28 Blackwell Guides to Literature See pages 7, 15, 21, 26, 27 & 34 Blackwell History of Literature See pages 15, 18 & 24 Blackwell Introductions to Literature See pages 15, 17, 18, 19, 28, 33, 34 & 35 Blackwell Manifestos See pages 40 & 41 Concise Companions to Literature and Culture See pages 11, 18, 19, 22, 24, 25, 27, 28, 30, 34 & 35 How to Study Literature See pages 3, 7 & 22 Reading the Novel See page 29 Shakespeare Head Press Editions of Virginia Woolf See page 29 2 www.literature-compass.com A Companion to NEW NEW KEY TEXTBOOK HAm umale,tDspgoiat nii i Digital Humanities Pome a etWio HowHrtow to Write a Poem The Literature Student’s Edited by SUSAN SCHREIBMAN, OJOHNRDEJHMN ON,D REDMOND TSs huK’,vter ial Survival Kit RAY SIEMENS & University of Liverpool What Every Reader Needs to Know URNAOYW SMJEH NUSOBIE MCAJOHNS,HNRTI E ,AN, UNSWORTH University of Maryland; University of Victoria; “A small masterpiece of clarity, economy and ANIWETL OIIANLO,D LITTLEWOOD University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign experience. It brings light to poetry as University of Sussex This unparalleled collection of original something made: something real and “The best and most up-to-date essays provides a complete yet realised.” compendium of essential facts DAVID MORLEY,WARWICK UNIVERSITY concise overview of this emerging drawn from Biblical lore, discipline.The essays discuss the In HOW TO WRITE A POEM, poet John Redmond universal history, literary GENERAL LITERATURE experiences of different disciplines of suggests that we should set aside the question of applying computational methods to chronologies, lists of tropes what poetry is and think about what poetry might and poetic movements... A humanities research problems; the be. basic principles of humanities desperately needed survival computing across applications and Through a series of chapters designed as useful kit for those who face our disciplines; specific applications and provocations, Redmond steers readers away from current mixture of methods; and production, the 'default contemporary poem', urging fresh information overload and short term memory.” dissemination, and archiving. ways of thinking, insisting on 'the promise and J.M. RABATÉ, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA opportunity of the blank Visit the accompanying website at: page'.Traditional chapter Who was Jezebel? What was the Wooden Horse? When was the www.digitalhumanities.org/ topics like the sestina and Enlightenment? Who were the Luddites? And what is blank companion the sonnet are abandoned verse? THE LITERATURE STUDENT’S SURVIVAL KIT gives students SERIES: BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO in favour of more inspiring about to embark on a literature degree all the background LITERATURE AND CULTURE themes like variety, scale information they need to stay afloat. 640 PAGES and background. 1-4051-0321-3 [ISBN13: 978-1-4051-0321-3] HB This one-stop reference book brings together the essential 2004 The book draws on a biblical, classical, historical, and academic information that wide array of examples, students need to survive their literary studies. It includes: from sixth-century Teaching 2 Ireland to contemporary An overview of the Bible, its books, characters, episodes, and places eurtaretiLng hicaeLiteratureT Poland, and diverse cultural analogies from baseball to film. Rather than 2 A guide to classical mythology NEALIHELAINES OW,ARET L SHOWALTER Princeton University thinking of poems as having meanings, the book suggests that we should think of them as being 2 Timelines that situate literary figures in relation to historical “People say that reading literature like plays, or computer games, as experiences events and key social, cultural, and linguistic changes does not make you a better designed for the reader's benefit. 2 Information on individuals, events, movements, and person. True. But reading this SERIES: HOW TO STUDY LITERATURE concepts that had an impact on the literature of each period 168 PAGES book will make you a better 2 1-4051-2479-2 [ISBN13: 978-1-4051-2479-9] HB Maps illustrating the biblical world, the classical world, the age teacher. And maybe make you 1-4051-2480-6 [ISBN13: 978-1-4051-2480-5] PB / JULY 2005 of exploration, and particular demographic and social changes think better of literature too.” 2 Glossaries of literary and critical terms TIMES HIGHER EDUCATION SUPPLEMENT FORTHCOMING 2 A list of literary critics and what they are known for 176 PAGES How to Read a Poem TERRY EAGLETON 0-631-22624-9 [ISBN13: 978-0-631-22624-6] PB 2 Advice on how to write essays at university level. 2002 192 PAGES 1-4051-5140-4 [ISBN13: 978-1-4051-5140-5] HB Written in a clear and accessible style, THE LITERATURE STUDENT’S See page 37 for Early Modern 1-4051-5141-2 [ISBN13: 978-1-4051-5141-2] PB SEPTEMBER 2006 SURVIVAL KIT enables students to approach their studies with Manuscript and Printed Book self-assurance. Studies and A Companion to See page 7 for How to Do Theory the History of the Book 288 PAGES See page 22 for How to Read a 1-4051-2284-6 [ISBN13: 978-1-4051-2284-9] HB 1-4051-2285-4 [ISBN13: 978-1-4051-2285-6] PB / NOVEMBER 2005 Shakespeare Play 3 GENERAL LITERATURE KEY TEXTBOOK NEW IN PAPERBACK onArTdthIo nu e i:cvt,el The English Novel secaPmlePremodernPrn oder Places An Introduction Calais to Surinam, Chaucer to Aphra Behn RTEY ATERRYEGTOE,LN EAGLETON DAV IDAVIDW,ALC E WALLACE University of Manchester University of Pennsylvania “Eagleton’s presentation of the history of “My Cinderella prize for the year's most underrated book goes to David Wallace, the novel is admirably clear and almost whose Pre-Modern [sic] Places mixes romance and bizarrerie in a study of entirely free of the disfiguring jargon so mediaeval and Renaissance ideas about geography and locality.” relied upon by theorists and bamboozlers.” JONATHAN KEATES,THE SPECTATOR ‘BOOK OF THE YEAR’ FEATURE, 2004 [OF THE HARDBACK EDITION] THE IRISH INDEPENDENT This highly original and engaging work recreates the places that appear in the works of This book provides a wide-ranging, accessible medieval and Renaissance writers, among them Langland, Chaucer, Dante, Petrarch, Spenser, and humorous introduction to the English Shakespeare, and Aphra Behn. novel from Daniel Defoe to the present day. Beginning with Calais, peopled by the English from 1347 to 1558, and ending with Surinam, Terry Eagleton starts by distilling the essentials traded away for Manhattan in 1667, this well-illustrated book explores the distinctive of the theory of the novel, summarizing what cultural life of a range of locations: from Flanders, which led the world in technological has been written on the genre by a range of innovation; to Somerset, which provided a fitting home for Dante; to the Canaries (the prominent theorists.There then follows a Fortunate Islands), which formed the limits of western dreaming. series of chapters on major novelists. Each David Wallace's journey through premodern places features fascinating

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