The Pursuit of Signs

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Routledge, Nov 29, 2005 - Literary Criticism - 304 pages

To gain a deeper understanding of the literary movement that has dominated recent Anglo-American literary criticism, The Pursuit of Signs is a must. In a world increasingly mediated, it offers insights into our ways of consuming texts that are both brilliant and bold. Dancing through semiotics, reader-response criticism, the value of the apostrophe and much more, Jonathan Culler opens up for every reader the closed world of literary criticism. Its impact on first publication, in 1981, was immense; now, as Mieke Bal notes, 'the book has the same urgency and acuity that it had then', though today it has even wider implications: 'with the interdisciplinary turn taking hold, literary theory itself, through this book, becomes a much more widespread tool for cultural analysis'.

 

Contents

Preface
Beyond Interpretation
In Pursuit Of Signs
Semiotics As A Theory Of Reading
Riffaterre And The Semiotics Of Poetry
Presupposition And Intertextuality
Stanley Fish And The Righting Of The Reader
Apostrophe
The Mirror Stage
Story And Discourse In The Analysis Of Narrative
The Turns Of Metaphor
Literary Theory In The Graduate Program
References
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Jonathan Culler (1944- ), Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Cornell University, pioneered the application of semiotics to the study of literature in the English-speaking world. Other publications include Structuralist Poetics and On Deconstruction.

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