Practical Criticism

Regular price €198.40
A01=I. A. Richards
Alpine Peak
Author_I. A. Richards
Border Line Case
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Category=QD
close reading
cognitive poetics
Cosy Parlour
Devious
Donne's Sonnet
Donne’s Sonnet
Dry Den
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eq_biography-true-stories
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Follow
Garden Stair
Grandest Aspects
Insidious Mastery
Key Board
literary theory
Logical Relations
Mawkish Sentiment
Mnemonic Irrelevance
Numberless Infinities
Part III
Poetic Rhythm
presuppositions
psychological foundations of poetry analysis
Quot Homines Tot Sententiae
reader response criticism
semantic interpretation
Solemn Trees
stock
Stock Responses
technical
Technical Presuppositions
textual analysis
Tingling Strings
Titanic Crests
Tremendous Triumph
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138530638
  • Weight: 860g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Aug 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Linguist, critic, poet, psychologist, I. A. Richards (1893-1979) was one of the great polymaths of the twentieth century. He is best known, however, as one of the founders of modern literary critical theory. Richards revolutionized criticism by turning away from biographical and historical readings as well as from the aesthetic impressionism. Seeking a more exacting approach, he analyzed literary texts as syntactical structures that could be broken down into smaller interacting verbal units of meaning. Practical Criticism, first published in 1929, is a landmark volume in demonstrating this method.Practical Criticism was born of an experiment Richards undertook to discern the psychological foundations of reading and interpretation and a means for readers to discover how they think and feel about poetry. He submitted thirteen poems for analysis, without date or author given, to some four hundred of his Cambridge students. Poets of stature went in undifferentiated from obscure and forgotten figures. The results were mixed at best, with many of the interpretations shockingly bad. These readings were based, in large part, not on the texts themselves but on then-current opinions, presuppositions, theories, and beliefs. The results led Richards to define a set of interrelated mental obstacles to intelligent and accurate reading including "irrelevant associations," "stock responses," "sentimentality," and a general misunderstanding of the purpose or "doctrine" of poetry.Richards' concerns in Practical Criticism went well beyond the merely formal. In the humanist tradition, he believed that the ability to read critically and use language truthfully was culturally regenerative, a necessary skill in the modern world of mass-produced art and advertising. This classic volume will be of interest to teachers of literature, cultural studies specialists, and intellectual historians.