Lexington Books
Pages: 250
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-0-7391-0261-9 • Hardback • December 2001 • $139.00 • (£107.00)
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).
Chapter 1 Introduction: Reception Study in a Multicultural Era
Chapter 2 Cultural Value and Poststructionalist Theory: The Case for a Leftwing Reception Study
Chapter 3 Marxism and/as Humanism: The Reception of Hamlet
Chapter 4 Feminism and Poststructionalist Criticism: The Reception of Pride and Prejudice
Chapter 5 Conformity and Resistance in High Art: From Thomas Hardy to Toni Morrison
Chapter 6 Gender, Spies, and Art: Ian Fleming, John Le Carré, Mickey Spillane, and Sara Paretsky
Chapter 7 Orwell as a (Neo)conservative: The Reception of 1984
Chapter 8 Critical Realism or Black Modernism? The Reception of Their Eyes Were Watching God
Reception Theory's understanding of textual meaning as the social and historical life of texts gives it a metacritical status in relation to other interpretive discourses, which are themselves a part of that life. Philip Goldstein's Communities of Cultural Value makes an important move in putting reception theory back on the agenda of literary and cultural studies.
— John Frow, University of Edinburgh