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Peculiar Language

Literature as Difference from the Renaissance to James Joyce


 
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Literary Studies
Literary Studies MOSTLY Theory

Routledge

Due/Published September 2004, 280 pages, paper

ISBN 0415340586

First published in 1988, now reissued (F04)

This book challenges traditional notions of literary criticism, arguing that all attempts by writers, critics and literary theorists to define the language of literature have involved self-contradiction. Through examination of key moments in literary history, Derek Attridge demonstrates that such contradictions in accounts of literary language are embedded in our cultural concept of "literature" and asserts that in order to appreciate the forces that determine the limits of literary language, we must look beyond the realm of the "literary" and embrace the wider political and social sphere. While key examples have been drawn from the Renaissance, Romanticism and the work of James Joyce, Attridge's unique application of deconstructive methods have ensured that the influence of this book has been felt across the entire field of literary studies.

This edition includes a new preface by the author. Alongside his new book, The Singularity of Literature, Peculiar Language confirms Derek Attridge's place at the cutting-edge of contemporary critical theory.

 
 



 
 
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