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Full Description
A lively series of spatial turns in literary studies since the 1990s give rise to this engaged and practical book, devoted to the question of how to teach and study the relationship between all sorts of literature and all sorts of location. Among the many concrete examples explored are texts created between the early seventeenth and the early twenty-first centuries, in genres ranging from stage drama and lyric poetry to television, by way of several studies of fiction definable in a broad way as realist. Writers and thinkers discussed include Michel de Certeau, Edward Casey, Gwendolyn Brooks, Christina Rossetti, Dickens, J. Hillis Miller, Lynne Reid Banks, Heidegger, Shakespeare, Thomas Middleton, Thomas Dekker, Stephen C. Levinson, Bernard Malamud, E.M. Forster, Thomas Burke and Samuel Beckett. The book is underpinned by the philosophical topology of Jeff Malpas, who insists that human life is necessarily and primarily located. It is aimed at students and teachers of literary place at all university levels.
Contents
1. Series editor's preface; 2. Acknowledgements; 3. List of images and maps; 4. 1. Introduction; 5. 2. Applications in research and pedagogy; 6. 3. The Heideggerian fourfold and a Shakespeare play; 7. 4. The precise spot occupied by a Renaissance playhouse; 8. 5. Spatial deixis and a single story; 9. 6. Technology and toponym in a canonized novel; 10. 7. An imaginative place: The East End of London; 11. 8. Anti-place and multiple place in Beckett; 12. Afterword; 13. A-Z glossary of terms; 14. List of references; 15. Index