The literary canon commonly thought of as ancient, accepted and agreed, and consistent between high and popular cultures. This article demonstrates the falsity of these assumptions, and argues that the canon is always provisional, contingent, iterable and overdetermined by multiple consequences of cultural struggle. Using definitions of canonicity from Harold Bloom, Frank Kermode and Pierre Bourdieu, the article shows how the canon is produced, consumed and reproduced. Picking up on Harold Bloom’s use of a poem by Wallace Stevens, the article explores the impact of Arabic adaptations of Shakespeare on canon-formation and canonicity.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
The Shakespeare Apocrypha has persisted as a category for plays of dubious authorship since 1908. De...
<div>This article seeks to examine Samuel Beckett’s subversive and countercanonical use of the canon...
The Shakespeare Apocrypha has persisted as a category for plays of dubious authorship since 1908. De...
This essay is concerned with how Shakespeare himself might have thought about a canon. What fo...
Harold Bloom, in the Western Canon, selected only twenty-six sine qua non writers and, invoking Giam...
The aim of the article is to discuss the evolution of the concept of the literary canon in the conte...
The present thesis focuses on the critical dialogues on the literary canon developed between 1970 a...
This thesis sets out to investigate the concept of a canon, and its impact upon the teaching and exa...
This is a thesis examining the relationship between three pairs of texts – Charlotte Brontë’s Jane E...
What does it mean to engage in canon formation at this historical moment? In what ways does the prev...
An essay is presented on the marketing of William Shakespeare's literary works. It offers a discussi...
Although debate about the literary canon intensified in the late 1980s, literature teachers continue...
In the context of a more general (critical) interest in what is happening in American universities, ...
In the context of a more general (critical) interest in what is happening in American universities, ...
An essay is presented on the marketing of William Shakespeare's literary works. It offers a discussi...
The Shakespeare Apocrypha has persisted as a category for plays of dubious authorship since 1908. De...
<div>This article seeks to examine Samuel Beckett’s subversive and countercanonical use of the canon...
The Shakespeare Apocrypha has persisted as a category for plays of dubious authorship since 1908. De...
This essay is concerned with how Shakespeare himself might have thought about a canon. What fo...
Harold Bloom, in the Western Canon, selected only twenty-six sine qua non writers and, invoking Giam...
The aim of the article is to discuss the evolution of the concept of the literary canon in the conte...
The present thesis focuses on the critical dialogues on the literary canon developed between 1970 a...
This thesis sets out to investigate the concept of a canon, and its impact upon the teaching and exa...
This is a thesis examining the relationship between three pairs of texts – Charlotte Brontë’s Jane E...
What does it mean to engage in canon formation at this historical moment? In what ways does the prev...
An essay is presented on the marketing of William Shakespeare's literary works. It offers a discussi...
Although debate about the literary canon intensified in the late 1980s, literature teachers continue...
In the context of a more general (critical) interest in what is happening in American universities, ...
In the context of a more general (critical) interest in what is happening in American universities, ...
An essay is presented on the marketing of William Shakespeare's literary works. It offers a discussi...
The Shakespeare Apocrypha has persisted as a category for plays of dubious authorship since 1908. De...
<div>This article seeks to examine Samuel Beckett’s subversive and countercanonical use of the canon...
The Shakespeare Apocrypha has persisted as a category for plays of dubious authorship since 1908. De...