Description

Book Synopsis
This major new introduction to comparative literature is for the students coming to the subject for the first time. Through an examination of a series of case studies and new theoretical developments, Bassnett reviews the current state of comparative literature world-wide in the 1990s. In the past twenty years of a range of new developments in critical theory have changed patterns of reading and approaches to literature: gender-based criticism, reception studies, the growth of translation studies, deconstruction and orientalism all have had a profound impact on work in comparative literature.

Bassnett asks questions not only about the current state of comparative literature as a discipline, but also about its future. Since its beginnings in the nineteenth century, comparative literature has been closely associated with the emergence of national cultures, and its present expansion in many parts of the world indicates that this process is again underway, after a period of narrowly Eu

Trade Review
"This book is an often insightful and provocative." Journal of Caribbean Studies

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements.

Introduction: What is Comparative Literature Today?.

1. How Comparative Literature came into Being.

2. Beyond Frontiers of Europe: Alternative Concepts of Comparative Literature.

3. Comparing the Literatures of the British Isles.

4. Comparative Identities in the Post-Colonial World.

5. Constructing Cultures: the Politics of Travellers' Tales.

6. Gender and Thematics: the Case of Guinevere.

7. From Comparative Literature to Translation Studies.

Notes.

Select Bibliography.

Index.

Comparative Literature

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    A Paperback / softback by Susan Bassnett


      View other formats and editions of Comparative Literature by Susan Bassnett

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 03/09/1993
      ISBN13: 9780631167051, 978-0631167051
      ISBN10: 0631167056

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This major new introduction to comparative literature is for the students coming to the subject for the first time. Through an examination of a series of case studies and new theoretical developments, Bassnett reviews the current state of comparative literature world-wide in the 1990s. In the past twenty years of a range of new developments in critical theory have changed patterns of reading and approaches to literature: gender-based criticism, reception studies, the growth of translation studies, deconstruction and orientalism all have had a profound impact on work in comparative literature.

      Bassnett asks questions not only about the current state of comparative literature as a discipline, but also about its future. Since its beginnings in the nineteenth century, comparative literature has been closely associated with the emergence of national cultures, and its present expansion in many parts of the world indicates that this process is again underway, after a period of narrowly Eu

      Trade Review
      "This book is an often insightful and provocative." Journal of Caribbean Studies

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements.

      Introduction: What is Comparative Literature Today?.

      1. How Comparative Literature came into Being.

      2. Beyond Frontiers of Europe: Alternative Concepts of Comparative Literature.

      3. Comparing the Literatures of the British Isles.

      4. Comparative Identities in the Post-Colonial World.

      5. Constructing Cultures: the Politics of Travellers' Tales.

      6. Gender and Thematics: the Case of Guinevere.

      7. From Comparative Literature to Translation Studies.

      Notes.

      Select Bibliography.

      Index.

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