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Longman Critical Readers

44 Series Titles


New Historicism and Renaissance Drama

New Historicism and Renaissance Drama

1st Edition

By Richard Wilson, Richard Dutton
December 14, 2017

New Historicism has been one of the major developments in literary theory over the last decade, both in the USA and Europe. In this book, Wilson and Dutton examine the theories behind New Historicism and its celebrated impact in practice on Renaissance Drama, providing an important collection both ...

Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf

1st Edition

By Rachel Bowlby
April 20, 2017

Rachel Bowlby's anthology of articles conjures up the enormous richness and variety of recent work that returns to Woolf not so much for final answers as for insights into questions about writing, literary traditions and the differences of the sexes. The collection includes pieces by such ...

Victorian Women Poets

Victorian Women Poets

1st Edition

By Tess Cosslett
January 18, 2017

Through her selection of fourteen essays, Tess Cosslett charts the rediscovery by feminist critics of the Victorian Women Poets such as Emily Brontë, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Christina Rossetti, and the subsequent developments as critics use a range of modern theoretical approaches to ...

Andrew Marvell

Andrew Marvell

1st Edition

By Thomas Healy
August 17, 2016

Andrew Marvell brings together ten recent and critically informed essays by leading scholars on one of the most challenging and important seventeenth-century poets. The essays examine Marvell's poems, from lyrics, such as 'To His Coy Mistress' and 'The Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn', ...

Shakespeare's History Plays

Shakespeare's History Plays

1st Edition

By Robert Watt
January 10, 2003

Shakespeare's history plays are central to his dramatic achievement. In recent years they have become more widely studied than ever, stimulating intensely contested interpretations, due to their relevance to central contemporary issues such as English, national identities and gender roles. ...

The Brontes

The Brontes

1st Edition

By Patricia Ingham
October 03, 2002

The novels of Charlotte and Emily Bronte have become canonical texts for the application of twentieth century literary and cultural theory. Along with the work of their sister, Anne, their texts are regarded as a sources of diversity in themselves, full of conflictual material which different ...

Laurence Sterne

Laurence Sterne

1st Edition

By Marcus Walsh
July 18, 2002

The eighteenth century was a period when the modern Novel emerged through the work of writers such as Laurence Sterne (1713-68), Richardson, Defoe, Fielding and Johnson. However, the writing of Sterne is recognised as influencing modern writing from Joyce and Woolf onwards more than any of the ...

Modern Genre Theory

Modern Genre Theory

1st Edition

By David Duff
November 17, 1999

Since Aristotle, genre has been one of the fundamental concepts of literary theory, and much of the world's literature and criticism has been shaped by ideas about the nature, function and value of literary genres. Modern developments in critical theory, however, prompted in part by the ...

Samuel Beckett

Samuel Beckett

1st Edition

By Jennifer Birkett, Kate Ince
September 27, 1999

 Bringing together seminal writings on Beckett from the 1950s and 1960s with critical readings from the 1980s and 1990s, this collection is inspired by a wide variety of literary-theoretical approaches and covers the whole range of Beckett's creative work. Following an up-to-date review and ...

Ben Jonson

Ben Jonson

1st Edition

By Richard Dutton
September 01, 1999

Interest in Ben Jonson is higher today than at any time since his death. This new collection offers detailed readings of all the major plays - Volpone, Epicene, The Alchemist and Bartholomew Fair - and the poems. It also provides significant insights into the court masques and the later plays which...

Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift

1st Edition

By Nigel Wood
March 02, 1999

This collection of critical thinking situates the satire of Jonathan Swift within both its eighteenth-century contexts and our modern anxieties about personal identity and communication. Augustan satire at its most provocative is not simply concerned with the public matters of politics or religion,...

Christopher Marlowe

Christopher Marlowe

1st Edition

By Richard Wilson
February 25, 1999

Christopher Marlowe has provoked some of the most radical criticism of recent years. There is an elective affinity, it seems, between this pre-modern dramatist and the post-modern critics whose best work has been inspired by his plays. The reason suggested by this collection of essays is that ...

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