SHAPING JOY studies in the writer's craft.

In A Shaping Joy (originally published in 1971), Cleanth Brooks writes about modern literature and the criticism that has been developed to deal with it. Most of the essays concern poets and novelists of the twentieth century, but there are also discussions of nineteenth-century American writers suc...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Taylor & Francis)
Main Author: Brooks, Cleanth, 1906-1994
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: [S.l.] : ROUTLEDGE, 2024.
Series:Routledge revivals
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Summary:In A Shaping Joy (originally published in 1971), Cleanth Brooks writes about modern literature and the criticism that has been developed to deal with it. Most of the essays concern poets and novelists of the twentieth century, but there are also discussions of nineteenth-century American writers such as Mark Twain and Edgar Allen Poe, and of traditional English poets such as Wordsworth, Milton, and Marlowe. Among the functions of literature described in the first essay are those of nourishing the imagination and keeping the language alive and the channels of communication open. The criticism contained in the essays that follow admirably exemplifies these concerns. Whether writing on the world of William Faulkner and the literature of the American South, or on subjects more familiar to the British reader--Joyce, Auden, and T.S. Eliot, for example--Professor Brooks keeps the methods of communication marvelously unblocked. It is criticism of the rarest kind--alert, imaginative and wholly invigorating. This book will be a beneficial read for students and researchers of English literature, particularly of literary criticism.
Physical Description:1 online resource
ISBN:9781040144435
1040144438
9781003528555
1003528554
9781040144503
1040144500
Biographical or Historical Data:Cleanth Brooks was an American literary critic and professor whose work was important in establishing the New Criticism, which stressed close reading and structural analysis of literature. Brooks taught at Yale University from 1947 to 1975 and was also a Library of Congress fellow (1951-62) and cultural attaché at the U.S. embassy in London (1964-66).