Reader-Response Criticism: From Formalism to Post-Structuralism

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Reader-Response Criticism: From Formalism to Post-Structuralism collects for the first time the most important theoretical statements on readers and the reading process. Its essays trace the development of reader-response criticism from its beginnings in New Criticism (Walker Gibson) through its appearance in structuralism (Gerald Prince, Jonathan Culler), stylistics (Michael Riffaterre), phenomenology (Georges Poulet, Wolfgang Iser, Stanley Fish), psychoanalytic criticism (Norman N. Holland, David Bleich), and post-structuralist theory (Fish, Walter Benn Michaels). The editor shows how each of these essays treats the problern of determinate meaning and compares their unspoken moral assumptions. In a concluding essay, she redefines the reader-response movement by placing it in historical perspective, providing the first short history of the concept of literary response. A complete, up-to-date, annotated bibliography of reader-oriented work, both theoretical and applied, makes this anthology an excellent guide to reader-response criticism. It is a valuable text for courses in literary criticism and theory as weil as a superior reference work for scholars and students of literature, critical theory, and the philosophy of art.

Author(s): Jane P. Tompkins (ed.)
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Year: 1980

Language: English
Pages: xxvi, 275
City: Baltimore
Tags: Reader-response criticism -- Addresses, essays, lectures

Acknowledgments vii

JANE P. TOMPKINS
An Introduction to Reader-Response Criticism ix
1 WALKER GIBSON
Authors, Speakers, Readers, and Mock Readers 1
2 GERALD PRINCE
Introduction to the Study of the Narratee 7
3 MICHAEL RIFFATERRE
Describing Poetic Structures: Two Approaches to Baudelaire's "Les Chats" 26
4 GEORGES POULET
Criticism and the Experience of Interiority 41
5 WOLFGANG ISER
The Reading Process: A Phenomenological Approach 50
6 STANLEY E. FISH
Literature in the Reader: Affective Stylistics 70
7 JONATHAN CULLER
Literary Competence 101
8 NORMAN N. HOLLAND
Unity Identity Text Seif 118
9 DAVID BLEICH
Epistemological Assumptions in the Study of Response 134
10 STANLEY E. FISH
Interpreting the Variorum 164
11 WALTER BENN MICHAELS
The Interpreter's Self: Peirce on the Cartesian "Subject" 185
12 JANE P. TOMPKINS
The Reader in History: The Changing Shape of Literary Response 20l

Annotated Bibliography 233
Notes on Contributors 273