Textual Friendship PDF Download

Are you looking for read ebook online? Search for your book and save it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Download Textual Friendship PDF full book. Access full book title Textual Friendship.

Textual Friendship

Textual Friendship
Author: Kuisma Korhonen
Publisher: Prometheus Books
Total Pages: 502
Release: 2006
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

Download Textual Friendship Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

This in-depth study of the essay as a form of literary and philosophical expression examines the links between essay writing and the concept of friendship over a long textual tradition running from Plato's Phaedrus through Montaigne's Essais to Derrida's Politiques de l'amitié. Literary critic and philosopher Kuisma Korhonen suggests that the search for textual friendship motivates essayists as diverse as Bacon, Saint-Évremond, Mme de Lambert, Emerson, and Derrida. All of these writers have written at least one essay about friendship, and in each case, Korhonen interprets the notion of friendship as a figure for the textual encounter, both between the writer and reader and between each text and its many referenced predecessors.Korhonen points out that despite the boundary of text separating writer and reader, the essay invites friendship. Through its references to other writers it links readers and writers across boundaries of time and space. Korhonen discusses at length these impossible encounters, drawing on the ethical thought of Emmanuel Levinas, especially his emphasis on the ethical implications of the Other.Korhonen goes on to construct an ethical genealogy of the essay, focusing mainly on Montaigne. He notes three textual strategies in Montaigne's essay: the use of rhetoric in producing a friendly ethos, the philosophical dialogue going back to Plato as a subtext for the essay form, and a Pyrrhonian skepticism that questions the status of propositional language.Finally Korhonen examines specific texts on friendship, including Plato, Cicero, Seneca, Augustine, Montaigne, Bacon, Emerson, Saint-Évremont, Mme de Lambert, and Derrida.This is a work of great erudition that makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the expressive possibilities and philosophical implications of the essay.Kuisma Korhonen, Ph.D. (Helsinki, Finland) is a Fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced studies, a Docent in Comparative Literature at the University of Helsinki, and the author of numerous articles and book chapters on literary theory, philosophy, and comparative literature.


Textual Intercourse

Textual Intercourse
Author: Jeffrey Masten
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1997-02-20
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780521589208

Download Textual Intercourse Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Textual Intercourse proposes that the language and practice of writing plays in early modern England was inextricably linked to languages and practices of eroticism, sexuality and reproduction. Jeffrey Masten reads a range of early modern materials - burial records, contemporary biographical anecdotes and theatrical records, essays, conduct books and poems; the printed apparatus of published plays, and the plays themselves - to illustrate the ways in which writing for the theatre shifted from a model of homoerotic collaboration toward one of singular authorship on a patriarchal-absolutist model. Plays and collections of plays by Shakespeare, Shakespeare and Fletcher, Beaumont and Fletcher, Margaret Cavendish, and others, are considered. Textual Intercourse illustrate the ways in which methods attuned to sexuality and gender can illuminate more traditional questions of authorship, attribution, textual editing and intellectual property.


Textual Transformations

Textual Transformations
Author: Tessa Whitehouse
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 277
Release: 2020-01-12
Genre:
ISBN: 019880881X

Download Textual Transformations Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Early modern books were not stable or settled outputs of the press but dynamic shape-changers, subject to reworking, re-presentation, revision, and reinterpretation. Their history is often the history of multiple, sometimes competing, agencies as their texts were re-packaged, redirected, and transformed in ways that their original authors might hardly recognize. Processes of editing, revision, redaction, selection, abridgement, glossing, disputation, translation, and posthumous publication resulted in a textual elasticity and mobility that could dissolve distinctions between text and paratexts, textuality and intertextuality, manuscript and print, author and reader or editor, such that title and author's name are no longer sufficient pointers to a book's identity or contents. This collection brings together original essays by an international team of eminent scholars in the field of book history that explore these various kinds of textual inconstancy and variability. The essays are alive to the impact of commercial and technological aspects of book production and distribution (discussing, for example, the career of the pre-eminent bookseller John Nourse, the market appeal of abridgements, and the financial incentives to posthumous publication), but their interest is also in the many additional forms of agency that shaped texts and their meanings as books were repurposed to articulate, and respond to, a variety of cultural and individual needs. They engage with early modern religious, political, philosophical, and scholarly trends and debates as they discuss a wide range of genres and kinds of publication including fictional and non-fictional prose, verse miscellanies, abridgements, sermons, religious controversy, and of authors including Lucy Hutchinson, Richard Baxter, John Dryden, Thomas Burnet, John Tillotson, Henry Maundrell, Jonathan Swift, Samuel Richardson, John Wesley, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The result is a richly diverse collection that demonstrates the embeddedness of the book trade in the cultural dynamics of early modernity.


Transcendental Resistance

Transcendental Resistance
Author: Johannes Voelz
Publisher: UPNE
Total Pages: 338
Release: 2010
Genre: History
ISBN: 1584659378

Download Transcendental Resistance Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

A timely and engrossing critique of the New Americanists


Textual Practice

Textual Practice
Author: Terence Hawkes
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 369
Release: 2005-10-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 113489323X

Download Textual Practice Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

First published in 1992. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.


The Textual Culture of English Protestant Dissent 1720-1800

The Textual Culture of English Protestant Dissent 1720-1800
Author: Tessa Whitehouse
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2015
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0198717849

Download The Textual Culture of English Protestant Dissent 1720-1800 Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

The Textual Culture of English Protestant Dissent 1720-1800 explores the sociable character of dissenters' teaching and writing in the eighteenth century by focussing on manuscript cultures and publishing projects.


Fictions of Friendship in the Eighteenth-Century Novel

Fictions of Friendship in the Eighteenth-Century Novel
Author: Bryan Mangano
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2017-07-19
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3319486950

Download Fictions of Friendship in the Eighteenth-Century Novel Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

This book explores the reciprocal influence of friendship ideals and narrative forms in eighteenth-century British fiction. It examines how various novelists, from Samuel Richardson to Mary Shelley, drew upon classical and early modern conceptions of true amity as a model of collaborative pedagogy. Analyzing authors, their professional circumstances, and their audiences, the study shows how the rhetoric of friendship became a means of paying deference to the increasing power of readerships, while it also served as a semi-covert means to persuade resistant readers and confront aesthetic and moral debates head on. The study contributes to an understanding of gender roles in the early history of the novel by disclosing the constant interplay between male and female models of amity. It demonstrates that this gendered dialogue shaped the way novelists imagined character interiority, reconciled with the commercial aspects of writing, and engaged mixed-sex audiences.


Reading Today

Reading Today
Author: Heta Pyrhönen
Publisher: UCL Press
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2018-01-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1787351963

Download Reading Today Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

New technologies are changing our reading habits. Laptops, e-readers, tablets and other handheld devices supply new platforms for reading, and we must learn to manage them by scrolling, clicking or tapping. Reading Today places reading in current literary and cultural contexts in order to analyse how these contexts challenge our conceptions of who reads, what reading is, how we read, where we read, and for what purposes – and then responds to the questions this analysis raises. Is our reading experience becoming a ‘flat’ one? And does reading in a media environment favour quick reading? Alongside these questions, the contributors unpack emerging strategies of reading.They consider, for example, how paying attention to readers’ emotional reactions as an indispensable component of reading affects our conception of the reading process. Other chapters consider how reading can be explored through such topics as experimental literature, the contemporary encyclopedic novel and the healing power of books.


Perfecting Friendship

Perfecting Friendship
Author: Ivy Schweitzer
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2007-09-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0807876712

Download Perfecting Friendship Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Contemporary notions of friendship regularly place it in the private sphere, associated with feminized forms of sympathy and affection. As Ivy Schweitzer explains, however, this perception leads to a misunderstanding of American history. In an exploration of early American literature and culture, Schweitzer uncovers friendships built on a classical model that is both public and political in nature. Schweitzer begins with Aristotle's ideal of "perfect" friendship that positions freely chosen relationships among equals as the highest realization of ethical, social, and political bonds. Evidence in works by John Winthrop, Hannah Foster, James Fenimore Cooper, and Catharine Sedgwick confirms that this classical model shaped early American concepts of friendship and, thus, democracy. Schweitzer argues that recognizing the centrality of friendship as a cultural institution is critical to understanding the rationales for consolidating power among white males in the young nation. She also demonstrates how women, nonelite groups, and minorities have appropriated and redefined the discourse of perfect friendship, making equality its result rather than its requirement. By recovering the public nature of friendship, Schweitzer establishes discourse about affection and affiliation as a central component of American identity and democratic community.


Signs of Friendship

Signs of Friendship
Author: A. G. F. van Holk
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 616
Release: 1984
Genre: Linguistics
ISBN: 9789062035274

Download Signs of Friendship Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle