Communities of Cultural Value: Reception Study, Political Differences, and Literary History

¾ÕÇ¥Áö
Lexington Books, 2001 - 241ÆäÀÌÁö
Philip Goldstein is fast establishing himself as the doyen of "reception study," a discipline that assumes that the reader's interpretive practices explain a text's import. In his latest work, Communities of Cultural Value, Goldstein delves again into the realm of literary criticism, painting an absorbing picture of the changing nature of a growing, more diversified readership and its challenge to professional literary study.

Goldstein's PostMarxist approach investigates how interpretive communities govern the reader's practices, through lucid case studies that analyze the reception of texts and authors ranging from Jane Austen to John Le Carré. Communities of Cultural Values is an important addition to the continuing debate over art's aesthetic autonomy and the role of literary criticism in the 1990s, and it will be most valuable to readers seeking to chart the changing socio-historical condition of literary study.

µµ¼­ º»¹®¿¡¼­

¸ñÂ÷

Reception Study in a Multicultural Era
1
The Case for a LeftWing Reception Study
31
The Reception of Hamlet
53
ÀúÀÛ±Ç

Ç¥½ÃµÇÁö ¾ÊÀº ¼½¼Ç 5°³

±âŸ ÃâÆǺ» - ¸ðµÎ º¸±â

ÀÚÁÖ ³ª¿À´Â ´Ü¾î ¹× ±¸¹®

ÀÌ Ã¥À» ÂüÁ¶ÇÑ ÀÚ·á

ÀúÀÚ Á¤º¸ (2001)

Philip Goldstein is Professor of English at the University of Delaware. He is the editor of Reception Study: From Literary Theory to Cultural Studies (2000), and Styles of Cultural Activism: From Theory and Pedagogy to Women, Indians and Communism (1993). He is author of The Politics of Literary Criticism: An Introduction to Marxist Cultural Theory (1990).

µµ¼­ ¹®ÇåÁ¤º¸