Is it possible to return the literary text in all its particularity to the centre of literary study, without going back to the ‘words-on-the page’ myopia of the past? That is the primary question which Literature in contexts engages with.

In the 1980s the study of literary theory eclipsed the study of the literary text, but today, we are told, we are ‘post-theory’. Yet as it emerged from the shadow of theory, the literary text was eclipsed all over again by the study of context. Historicist contextualisation became the dominant orientation in literary studies, and this (not quite) New Historicism spread in turn through period after period, from the Early Modern, through Romanticism, and on to the Victorian era. ‘Is English History?’ people began to ask, as it became impossible to attend an academic conference without being subjected to a diet of history lessons.

This book seeks to problematise the very notion of context, which has remained for the most part stubbornly un-theorised and un-examined, and it seeks out – in a series of contextualising experiments – contexts which are text-specific, author-specific or literary, rather than historical, putting forward a distinction between ‘deep’ and ‘broad’ contexts and arguing that we need to counter the prevalence of the latter if literary studies is to avoid becoming a minor branch of history.

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This book seeks to problematise the very notion of context, which has remained for the most part stubbornly un-theorised and un-examined. The book aims to set a distinction between ‘deep’ and ‘broad’ contexts, arguing that we need to counter the prevalence of the latter if literary studies is to avoid becoming a minor branch of history.
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Introduction
1. Contextuality in context
2. Contextuality contested
3. Mutual contextuality: Coleridge’s conversation poems
4. Contextualising Hemans’s shipwrecks
5. Seeing the spot:Hopkins, Liverpool, and context
6. Picturing the context: contemporary poetry and ekphrasis
7. Beyond ‘secret narrative’: crime fiction verse narratives by women
8. Just the facts: content is context
List of works consulted
Index

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Is it possible to return the literary text in all its particularity to the centre of literary study, without going back to the ‘words-on-the page’ myopia of the past? That is the primary question which Literature in contexts engages with.

In the 1980s the study of literary theory eclipsed the study of the literary text, but today, we are told, we are ‘post-theory’. Yet as it emerged from the shadow of theory, the literary text was eclipsed all over again by the study of context. Historicist contextualisation became the dominant orientation in literary studies, and this (not quite) New Historicism spread in turn through period after period, from the Early Modern, through Romanticism, and on to the Victorian era. ‘Is English History?’ people began to ask, as it became impossible to attend an academic conference without being subjected to a diet of history lessons.

This book seeks to problematise the very notion of context, which has remained for the most part stubbornly un-theorised and un-examined, and it seeks out – in a series of contextualising experiments – contexts which are text-specific, author-specific or literary, rather than historical, putting forward a distinction between ‘deep’ and ‘broad’ contexts and arguing that we need to counter the prevalence of the latter if literary studies is to avoid becoming a minor branch of history.

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Product details

ISBN
9780719064548
Published
2007-11-01
Publisher
Manchester University Press; Manchester University Press
Height
234 mm
Width
156 mm
Age
UU, UP, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
224

Author

Biographical note

Peter Barry is Professor of English at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth