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About this book
Dealing mainly with the works of William Shakespeare, the essays in Close Readings without Readings reflect Stephen Booth's lifelong interest in uncovering the ways great literature works upon readers. As the book's title suggests, the author does not aim to create new or novel interpretations or to uncover the political agendas of literary works, but to notice language patternsârepetitions, analogies, correspondences, echoes, overtonesâand other ways in which the choice and the arrangement of words affect readers. For Booth, close reading is a practice of attentiveness. He notices how, why, and in what ways Shakespeare's works affect his readers. Whether readers agree with the premises of a literary work or not, they subject themselves, knowingly or not, to its effects. For Booth, what we value in literature is the experience. He has devoted his own work to recognizing the nature, process, and functions of reading literature, and to teaching others to do the same. Recent years have seen Booth's efforts recognized by volumes dedicated both to close reading and to his achievements as editor, scholar, critic, and teacher.
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Yes, you can access Close Reading without Readings by Stephen Booth in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & English Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Foreword
- Chapter 1: Poetic Richness, a Preliminary Audit
- Chapter 2: The Acquiescent Audience
- Chapter 3: Desdemonaâs Eyes and the Aesthetics of Blindness
- Chapter 4: 2 Henry IV and the Aesthetics of Failure
- Chapter 5: Faith in The Winterâs Tale and Faith in The Winterâs Tale
- Chapter 6: Discourse on the Witty Partition of A Midsummer Nightâs Dream
- Chapter 7: Twelfth Night and Othello
- Chapter 8: Deviation, Variation, and Variety in Stanza 1 of Venus and Adonis
- Chapter 9: On the Eventfulness of Hero and Leander
- Chapter 10: Prelapsarian Eroticism
- Chapter 11: On the Aesthetic Significance of Non-Signifying Signification in Romeo and Juliet
- Chapter 12: Liking Julius Caesar
- Chapter 13: On the Value of Hamlet
- About the Author