Literary Meaning
Description
The Quest for Literary Meaning: A Historical Overview
Phenomenology and the "Intentionality" of Meaning
Deconstruction and the Challenge to Stable Interpretation
Part I: Foundations of Phenomenology
Chapter 1: Edmund Husserl and the "Transcendental Ego"
The concept of "Noema" and "Noesis"
The "Epoché" or Bracketing Method
Applying Phenomenology to Literary Texts
Chapter 2: Maurice Merleau-Ponty and the Body Subject
Embodiment and Perception
The "Flesh" and Intercorporeality
Implications for Literary Experience
Part II: Deconstruction and the Critique of Meaning
Chapter 3: Jacques Derrida and the "Logocentrism" Critique
The "Trace" and "Différance"
The "Supplement" and the Play of Language
Deconstruction of Binary Oppositions
Chapter 4: Key Concepts in Deconstruction
Undecidability
Aporia
The "Textual" and the "Contextual"
Part III: Applying Deconstruction to Literature
Chapter 5: Deconstructing Narrative Structure
Unreliable Narrators
The "Open Ending"
The Role of Ambiguity
Chapter 6: Deconstructing Character and Identity
The "Split Subject"
The "Other" in Literature
Gender and Identity Politics in Deconstruction
Chapter 7: Deconstructing Genre Conventions
The "Subversion" of Genre
The "Hybrid" Text
The Limits of Genre Classification
Conclusion
The Legacy of Deconstruction in Literary Criticism
Beyond Deconstruction: New Directions in Interpretation
The Ongoing Debate about Meaning and Interpretation
William Ray is Associate Professor of French at Reed College, Oregon. This book is both a guide to, and interpretation of, the course of modern literary theory. Exploring the various theories of reading which have informed post-war literary criticism, it shows that for all the fervour of current debate about new movements in criticism, all these different approaches share at root a common notion of literary meaning.Through a successive examination of the most influential theoretical works, William Ray provides the reader with a clear view of how literary critics have conceived their object of study and of how they have sought to grasp the nature of fictional meaning. Starting with the French and German critics who brought the notion of consciousness to the fore in the fifties and sixties, he proceeds lucidly through expositions of Reader Response Criticism, Psychoanalytic Criticism, Structuralism, Semiotics and finally Deconstruction.
These different schools, Ray argues, all implicitly acknowledge that one cannot account for literary meaning purely in terms of 'structures' or 'events', yet they have persisted in trying to do just that. Some writers, such as the psychoanalytic and reader response critics, see meaning as deriving from the author's intention or the individual act of reading. Others, notably the structuralists and semioticians, hold that meaning has its source in the shared conventions of an author's and reader's culture. The repeated failure of either position to provide a critical practice consistent with its theory has driven literary criticism towards post-structuralism. The paradoxical formulations of deconstruction are best understood, Ray suggests, as an extreme, but historically predictable, attempt to bring the 'structural' and the 'eventual' definitions of meaning together within a peculiarly elusive, perhaps inconceivable, notion.
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9780631134589
BINDING:
Paperback
BISAC:
0
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 141.10(W) x Dimensions: 215.30(H) x Dimensions: 17.50(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English