西方文论

高 焓

目录

  • 1 New Criticism, moral formalism and F. R. Leavis
    • 1.1 Origins: Eliot, Richards, Empson
    • 1.2 The American New Critics
    • 1.3 Moral formalism: F. R. Leavis
  • 2 Russian Formalism
    • 2.1 Shklovsky, Mukarovsky, Jakobson
    • 2.2 The Bakhtin School
  • 3 Reader-oriented theories
    • 3.1 Phenomenology: Husserl, Heidegger, Gadamer
    • 3.2 Hans Robert Jauss and Wolfgang Iser
    • 3.3 Fish, Riffaterre, Bleich
  • 4 Structuralist theories
    • 4.1 The linguistic background
    • 4.2 Structuralist narratology
    • 4.3 Metaphor and metonymy
    • 4.4 Structuralist poetics
  • 5 Marxist theories
    • 5.1 Soviet Socialist Realism
    • 5.2 Lukacs and Brecht
    • 5.3 The Frankfurt School: Adorno and Benjamin
    • 5.4 "Structuralist" Marxism: Goldman, Althusser, Macherey
    • 5.5 "New Left" Marxism: Williams, Eagleton, Jameson
  • 6 Feminist theories
    • 6.1 First-wave feminist criticism: Woolf and de Beauvoir
    • 6.2 Second-wave feminist criticism
      • 6.2.1 Kate Millett: sexual politics
      • 6.2.2 Marxist feminism
      • 6.2.3 Elaine Showalter: gynocriticism
      • 6.2.4 French feminism: Kristeva, Cixous, Irigaray
  • 7 Poststructuralist theories
    • 7.1 Roland Barthes
    • 7.2 Psychoanalytic theories
      • 7.2.1 Jacques Lacan
      • 7.2.2 Julia Kristeva
      • 7.2.3 Deleuze and Guattari
    • 7.3 Deconstruction
      • 7.3.1 Jacques Derrida
      • 7.3.2 American deconstruction
    • 7.4 Michel Foucault
    • 7.5 New Historicism and cultural materialism
  • 8 Postmodernist theories
    • 8.1 Jean Baudrillard
    • 8.2 Jean-Francois Lyotard
    • 8.3 Postmodernim and Marxism
    • 8.4 Postmodern feminisms
  • 9 Postcolonial theories
    • 9.1 Edward Said
    • 9.2 Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
    • 9.3 Homi K. Bhabha
    • 9.4 Race and Ethnicity
  • 10 Gay, lesbian, and queer theories
    • 10.1 Gay theory and criticism
    • 10.2 Lesbian feminist theory and criticism
    • 10.3 Queer theory and criticism
Origins: Eliot, Richards, Empson
  • 1 重要人物介绍
  • 2 重要概念
  • 3 Tradition an...

Matthew Arnold, (born December 24, 1822, Laleham, Middlesex, England—died April 15, 1888, Liverpool), English Victorian poet and literary and social critic, noted especially for his classical attacks on the contemporary tastes and manners of the “Barbarians” (the aristocracy), the “Philistines” (the commercial middle class), and the “Populace.” He became the apostle of “culture” in such works as Culture and Anarchy (1869).


T.S. Eliot, in full Thomas Stearns Eliot, (born September 26, 1888, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.—died January 4, 1965, London, England), American-English poet, playwright, literary critic, and editor, a leader of the Modernist movement in poetry in such works as The Waste Land (1922) and Four Quartets (1943). Eliot exercised a strong influence on Anglo-American culture from the 1920s until late in the century. His experiments in diction, style, and versification revitalized English poetry, and in a series of critical essays he shattered old orthodoxies and erected new ones. The publication of Four Quartets led to his recognition as the greatest living English poet and man of letters, and in 1948 he was awarded both the Order of Merit and the Nobel Prize for Literature.


I.A. Richards, in full Ivor Armstrong Richards, (born Feb. 26, 1893, Sandbach, Cheshire, Eng.—died Sept. 7, 1979, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire), English critic, poet, and teacher who was highly influential in developing a new way of reading poetry that led to the New Criticism and that also influenced some forms of reader-response criticismRichards was educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and was a lecturer in English and moral sciences there from 1922 to 1929. In that period he wrote three of his most influential books: The Meaning of Meaning (1923; with C.K. Ogden), a pioneer work on semantics; and Principles of Literary Criticism (1924) and Practical Criticism (1929), companion volumes that he used to develop his critical method. The latter two were based on experimental pedagogy: Richards would give students poems in which the titles and authors’ names had been removed and then use their responses for further development of their “close reading” skills. Richards is best known for advancing the close reading of literature and for articulating the theoretical principles upon which these skills lead to “practical criticism,” a method of increasing readers’ analytic powers.


William Empson, in full Sir William Empson, (born September 27, 1906, Hawdon, Yorkshire, England—died April 15, 1984, London), English critic and poet known for his immense influence on 20th-century literary criticism and for his rational, metaphysical poetry.Empson was educated at Winchester College and at Magdalene College, Cambridge. He earned degrees in mathematics and in English literature, which he studied under I.A. Richards. His first poems were published during this time. Several of the verses published in Empson’s Poems (1935) also were written while he was an undergraduate and reflect his knowledge of the sciences and technology, which he used as metaphors in his largely pessimistic assessment of the human lot. Much influenced by John Donne, the poems are personal, politically unconcerned (despite the preoccupation with politics in the 1930s), elliptical, and difficult, even though he provided some explanatory notes. Later collections of his poetry included The Gathering Storm (1940) and Collected Poems (1949; rev. ed. 1955).