Fr. 190.00

On Essays - Montaigne to the Present

English · Hardback

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Description

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Sets out in a new and authoritative way the history of the essay; explains how the essay has come to mean what it does, surveys the widely various incarnations of the form, offers new accounts of major essayists in English, and traces a wide range of significant themes.

List of contents










  • Introduction: On the difficulty of introducing a work of this kind

  • 1: Thomas Karshan: What is an Essay? Thirteen Answers from Virginia Woolf

  • 2: Warren Boutcher: The Montaignian Essay and Authored Miscellanies from Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century

  • 3: Kathryn Murphy: Of Sticks and Stones: The Essay, Experience, and Experiment

  • 4: Markman Ellis: Time and the Essay: The Spectator and Diurnal Fomr

  • 5: Fred Parker: The Sociable Philosopher: David Hume and the Philosophical Essay

  • 6: Scott Black: Tristram Shandy, Essayist

  • 7: Denise Gigante: On Coffee Houses, Smoking, and the English Essay Tradition

  • 8: Gregory Dart: The Romantic Essay and the City

  • 9: Felicity James: Charles Lamb, Elia, and Essays in Familiarity

  • 10: Tom Wright: Carlyle, Emerson, and the Voiced Essay

  • 11: Ophelia Field: Retiring or Engaging: Politics in the English Essay

  • 12: Stefano Evangelista: Things Said By The Way: Walter Pater and the Essay

  • 13: Bharat Tandon: 'Strips of Essayism': Eliot, Hardy, and the Victorian Periodical Essay

  • 14: Michael Wood: Rational Distortions: Essays in the British Novel After Borges

  • 15: Ned Stuckey-French: Creative Non-Fiction and the Lyric Essay: The American Essay in the Twenty-First Century

  • 16: Adam Phillips: Up To A Point: The Psychoanalyst and the Essay

  • 17: Christy Wampole: Dalí's Montaigne: Essay Hybrids and Surrealist Practice



About the author

Thomas Karshan is Senior Lecturer in Literature at the University of East Anglia. He is the author of Vladimir Nabokov and the Art of Play (Oxford University Press, 2011), the co-translator of Nabokov's The Tragedy of Mister Morn (Penguin, 2012), and the editor of Nabokov's Collected Poems (Penguin, 2013). From 2018 to 2020 he was President of the International Vladimir Nabokov Society. He has published articles on modern British, American, and Russian literature, and essays in the Times Literary Supplement, the London Review of Books, and elsewhere.

Kathryn Murphy is Fellow in English Literature at Oriel College, and Associate Professor in the Faculty of English, University of Oxford. Her academic work focuses on Renaissance poetry and philosophy, and on the literary essay. She is also a critic and essayist, writing regularly about still life painting for Apollo Magazine, and reviewing Czech literature for the TLS. She is currently writing two books: The Tottering Universal: Metaphysical Prose in the Seventeenth Century; and Robert Burton: A Vital Melancholy, a study of distraction, attention, and The Anatomy of Melancholy.

Summary

Sets out in a new and authoritative way the history of the essay; explains how the essay has come to mean what it does, surveys the widely various incarnations of the form, offers new accounts of major essayists in English, and traces a wide range of significant themes.

Product details

Authors Thomas (Senior Lecturer in Literature Karshan
Assisted by Thomas Karshan (Editor), Karshan Thomas (Editor), Kathryn Murphy (Editor), Murphy Kathryn (Editor)
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 03.09.2020
 
EAN 9780198707868
ISBN 978-0-19-870786-8
No. of pages 398
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative literary studies

Essays, LITERARY CRITICISM / General, PHILOSOPHY / History & Surveys / General, Literary essays, Literary theory

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