The Routledge History Of Literature In English

2015-12-23

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The Routledge History Of Literature In English

Britain and Ireland

 Ronald Carter, John McRae & Malcolm Bradbury 2001


E-Book: 307*2 English pages

Publisher: Routledge

Download: The Routledge History Of Literature In English (Carter, McRae & Bradbury 2001) 

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This is a completely updated and expanded second edition of the wide-ranging and accessible Routledge History of Literature in English. It covers the main developments in the history of British and Irish literature and has extensive accompanying language notes which explore the interrelationships between language and literature. With a span from AD 600 to the present day, it emphasises the growth of literary writing, its traditions, conventions and changing characteristics, and includes literature from the margins, both geographical and cultural. Extensive quotations from poetry, prose and drama underpin the narrative.
The second edition covers recent developments in literary and cultural theory and has the following features:
* additional or extended material on post-colonial writers, and the literature of the 1990s
* an expanded Timeline with Booker, Whitbread, and Nobel prize winners
* additions to the well-received language notes which include ‘Shakespeare’s language’, ‘Reading the language of theatre and drama’, ‘New modes of modern writing’ and ‘International and rotten Englishes’
* An expanded Timeline with Booker, Whitbread, and Nobel prize winners.


Review

‘The Routledge History of Literature in English is, as its title implies, an enormously ambitious and wide-ranging work. It offers judicious thumb-nail sketches of significant individual writers, and also valuable portraits of literary movements. Students of writing are bound to be indebted to it – and it has a clarity of structure and analysis that everyone will welcome.’

Andrew Motion

‘It provides the invaluable service of allowing the reader to see English Literature as a continuous dynamic rather than as a sequence of relatively independent periods.’

Margaret Sonmez, Linguist List


 

About the Author

Ronald Carter is Professor of Modern English Language in the School of English Studies at the University of Nottingham. He has published widely in the fields of English Language and Literary Studies. John McRae is Special Professor of Language in Literature Studies at the University of Nottingham and has been a Visiting Professor and Lecturer in more than twenty countries.


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