Van Hulle's Genetic Criticism is an annotated handbook to the method, offering useful typologies of texts and variants, modes of classification, and a survey of interpretive strategies that can be used to engage manuscripts, drafts, and other traces of composition...this carefully constructed book provides the kind of up-to-date survey that has been missing from English scholarship.

Geoffrey Lokke, Columbia University, Textual Cultures

In Genetic Criticism, Dirk Van Hulle introduces the study of creative processes to an Anglophone audience. As a method in the study of literary writing processes, genetic criticism is also a reading strategy. The idea behind this book is to introduce this strategy to a broader audience, from interested readers and graduate students to early career researchers and literary critics. In literary studies, it is often obvious that a particular work somehow seems to hit a nerve, but more challenging to pinpoint exactly why it 'works'. This book therefore starts from a clear, basic assumption: knowing how something was made can help us understand how and why it works. This strategy is at the basis of many disciplines, including art history. By means of X-ray technology or hyperspectral imaging, it is possible to look at a painting as a multilayered object with not only spatial dimensions, but also a temporal one. This temporal dimension is the core of the reading strategy introduced in this book. Note books, marginalia, manuscripts, and typescripts (even if one works with scans) give a concrete dimension to literature, which is a helpful reading strategy for many students. On the one hand, this involves concrete, transferrable skills such as aspects of transcription and digital scholarly editing. On the other hand, it also involves more abstract theoretical issues relating to matters of authorship, collaboration, authority, agency, intention and intertextuality.
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This book introduces genetic criticism as a reading strategy which investigates the origins and development of texts over time. Using case studies including Samuel Beckett and Ian McEwan, Van Hulle discusses the concrete and more abstract dimensions of this approach.
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Van Hulle's Genetic Criticism is an annotated handbook to the method, offering useful typologies of texts and variants, modes of classification, and a survey of interpretive strategies that can be used to engage manuscripts, drafts, and other traces of composition...this carefully constructed book provides the kind of up-to-date survey that has been missing from English scholarship.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780192846792
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
582 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
260

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Dirk Van Hulle is Professor of Bibliography and Modern Book History at the University of Oxford. He directs the Oxford Centre for Textual Editing and Theory (OCTET), and the Centre for Manuscript Genetics at the University of Antwerp. With Mark Nixon, he is co-director of the Beckett Digital Manuscript Project. He is the editor of the Journal of Beckett Studies. His publications include Textual Awareness (Michigan, 2004), Modern Manuscripts (Bloomsbury, 2014), The New Cambridge Companion to Samuel Beckett (Cambridge, 2015), the Beckett Digital Library, and several editions in the MLA award-winning Beckett Digital Manuscript Project.