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Tradition: A Feeling for the Literary Past: The Literary Agenda
Contributor(s): Lerer, Seth (Author)
ISBN: 0198736282     ISBN-13: 9780198736288
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $27.54  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: November 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Semiotics & Theory
LCCN: 2016934698
Series: Literary Agenda
Physical Information: 0.4" H x 5" W x 7.6" (0.35 lbs) 160 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The Literary Agenda is a series of short polemical monographs about the importance of literature and of reading in the wider world and about the state of literary education inside schools and universities.The category of the literary has always been contentious. What is clear, however, is
how increasingly it is dismissed or is unrecognised as a way of thinking or an arena for thought. It is skeptically challenged from within, for example, by the sometimes rival claims of cultural history, contextualized explanation, or media studies. It is shaken from without by even greater
pressures: by economic exigency and the severe social attitudes that can follow from it; by technological change that may leave the traditional forms of serious human communication looking merely antiquated. For just these reasons this is the right time for renewal, to start reinvigorated work into
the meaning and value of literary reading.

Seth Lerer presents an original take on tradition in the literary imagination. He asks how we can have an unironic, affective relationship to the literary past in an age marked by historical self-consciousness, critical distance, and shifts in cultural literacy. Tradition: A Feeling for the Literary
Past ranges through a set of fiction, poetry, and criticism that makes up our inherited traditions and that also confronts the question of a literary canon and its personal and historical meaning. How are we taught to have a felt experience of literary objects? How do we make our personal
anthologies of reading to shape social selves? Why should we care about what literature does both to and for us? This book affirms the value of close and nuanced reading for our understanding of both past and present. Its larger goal is to explore the ways in which the literary past makes us, and in
the process, how we create canons for reading, teaching, and scholarship. The writers discussed here were all great readers--Dickens and Orwell, Rushdie and Bradbury, Dickinson and Frost, Anne Bradstreet and Gjertrud Schnackenberg, Chaucer, Dante, Virgil--they all built their literary structures on
the scaffold of their bookshelves. Lerer demonstrates how reading the past generates the literary present, and imagines our literate future.