The Routledge Companion to Critical Theory

Simon Malpas & Paul Wake 2006


E-Book: 313 English Pages

Publisher: Routledge

Price: 1000 Toman

Download: The Routledge Companion to Critical Theory (Malpas & Wake 2006). 

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The Routledge Companion to Critical Theory is an indispensable aid for anyone approaching this exciting field of study for the first time.

By exploring ideas from a diverse range of disciplines, ‘theory’ encourages us to develop a deeper understanding of how we approach the written word. This book defines what is generically referred to as ‘critical theory’, and guides readers through some of the most complex and fundamental concepts in the field, ranging from Historicism to Postmodernism, from Psychoanalytic Criticism to Race and Postcoloniality.

Fully cross referenced throughout, the book encompasses manageable introductions to important ideas followed by a dictionary of terms and thinkers which students are likely to encounter. Further reading is offered to guide students to crucial primary essays and introductory chapters on each concept.


Review

‘An excellent introduction to the field.’  – Robert Eaglestone, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK

‘Comprehensive and wide-ranging, this volume combines accessibility with scholarly soundness to offer an up-dated and engaging coverage of all the essential schools in modern critical theory.’  – Galin Tihanov, Lancaster University, UK

‘[This book will be] popular with students seeking a handbook to critical theory both at introductory leve and for reference during more in-depth studies. An essential addition to any university library’ Linda Kemp, Languages and Literature


 

About the Author

Simon Malpas is Lecturer in English Literature at Edinburgh University. He is author of The Postmodern (2005) and Jean-Francois Lyotard (2003), editor of Postmodern Debates (2001) and, with John Joughin, The New Aestheticism (2003).
Paul Wake is a lecturer in English Literature at Manchester Metropolitan University. He has published articles on narrative theory and postmodernism. His monograph, Conrad’s Marlow: Narrative and Death in Youth, Heart of Darkness, Lord Jim and Chance will be published in 2007.