To read or not to read seems to be the great question for literary studies of our time. More specifically, in a world of abundant literary production in which it would take more than a lifetime just to read the fiction of a single year how can we decide what to read and how to read it? Three recent books by Amy Hungerford, Lee Clark Mitchell, and Nicholas Thoburn respectively have, in their own ways, turned to this problem
Review of Peter Mendelsund's, What We See When We Read, a book about the phenomenology of reading an...
Is a book on the web still a book? Do hyperlinks change the role of narrative? What is an author if ...
Matthew Kirshenbaum’s essay “What Is An @uthor?” argues that today’s social media landscape provides...
To read or not to read seems to be the great question for literary studies of our time. More specifi...
Review of Reading Theory Now: An ABC of Good Reading with J. Hillis Miller, by Éamonn Dunn
Beyond Poststructuralism: The Speculations of Theory and the Experience of Reading (Ed. by Wendell V...
Recent ideas about reading in literary criticism have centered around a fundamental question: what a...
This paper presents a review of three books i.e first publications in a new series, Literacies, edit...
ABSTRACT In this article I present an overview of the major changes in the literary field due to the...
Thesis advisor: Judith WiltExperience as an English major, a bookseller, a publishing intern, and a ...
Written in an epoch marked by a growing sense of anxiety regarding the future of the book, Nicholas ...
The 2010s has seen an explosion of scholarship eulogizing the novel, as if the medium has been fresh...
This study examines the experience of literary reading as an example of document work. It launches f...
Through a series of short interrelated reflections on every aspect of writing, reading and publishin...
This dissertation analyzes twenty-first century British avant-garde fiction and argues that a defini...
Review of Peter Mendelsund's, What We See When We Read, a book about the phenomenology of reading an...
Is a book on the web still a book? Do hyperlinks change the role of narrative? What is an author if ...
Matthew Kirshenbaum’s essay “What Is An @uthor?” argues that today’s social media landscape provides...
To read or not to read seems to be the great question for literary studies of our time. More specifi...
Review of Reading Theory Now: An ABC of Good Reading with J. Hillis Miller, by Éamonn Dunn
Beyond Poststructuralism: The Speculations of Theory and the Experience of Reading (Ed. by Wendell V...
Recent ideas about reading in literary criticism have centered around a fundamental question: what a...
This paper presents a review of three books i.e first publications in a new series, Literacies, edit...
ABSTRACT In this article I present an overview of the major changes in the literary field due to the...
Thesis advisor: Judith WiltExperience as an English major, a bookseller, a publishing intern, and a ...
Written in an epoch marked by a growing sense of anxiety regarding the future of the book, Nicholas ...
The 2010s has seen an explosion of scholarship eulogizing the novel, as if the medium has been fresh...
This study examines the experience of literary reading as an example of document work. It launches f...
Through a series of short interrelated reflections on every aspect of writing, reading and publishin...
This dissertation analyzes twenty-first century British avant-garde fiction and argues that a defini...
Review of Peter Mendelsund's, What We See When We Read, a book about the phenomenology of reading an...
Is a book on the web still a book? Do hyperlinks change the role of narrative? What is an author if ...
Matthew Kirshenbaum’s essay “What Is An @uthor?” argues that today’s social media landscape provides...