International audienceWhat can literary studies bring to our experience? The fact that many scholars, on both sides of the Atlantic, have recently felt the need to address this question is usually interpreted as a symptom of a " crisis " in the literary profession. Less students, less jobs, less attractiveness, less impact, less prestige: the study of literature seems bound to follow the path taken by the study of theology during the 19 th century. Against this background feeling of gloom and doom, the steady flow of manifestoes in favor of literary studies often sounds overblown by wishful thinking. Literary interpretations, as performed in the classroom, are supposed to ground, shape and expand our moral consciousness, set the foundations...
In a democracy, every individual is thought to have the potential to achieve what Matthew Arnold con...
This article presents a significant problem in contemporary teaching of literature: the crisis in re...
Like many of us, I’d thought the latest series of intellectual jousts between history and literature...
International audienceWhat can literary studies bring to our experience? The fact that many scholars...
This new collection of J. Hillis Miller’s essays centres on the question “why and to what end should...
Edward Said was flabbergasted that students of literature spoke in a language incomprehensible to hi...
Literary studies are in a deep crisis. It is the uneasiness of literary studies. That crisis is the ...
This contribution is rooted in my vision of literary education as a humanistic practice devoted to e...
Drawing on an interdisciplinary blend of sociology, didactics and literary scholarship, this dissert...
Contribution to "Why Teach Literature?" Program arranged by the forum TM The Teaching of Literature....
Angus Fletcher, a neuroscientist who hung up his lab coat to earn a Ph.D. in literature from Yale, s...
Althusser\u27s work arrived just when the disintegrating liberal consensus was shaking the ivory tow...
This introductory article explains the coverage of this book, which is about the relations of comple...
In this thesis, I investigate the role and power of literature in education. Literature is generally...
This chapter focuses on how doing empirical research can lead to insights in the way in which litera...
In a democracy, every individual is thought to have the potential to achieve what Matthew Arnold con...
This article presents a significant problem in contemporary teaching of literature: the crisis in re...
Like many of us, I’d thought the latest series of intellectual jousts between history and literature...
International audienceWhat can literary studies bring to our experience? The fact that many scholars...
This new collection of J. Hillis Miller’s essays centres on the question “why and to what end should...
Edward Said was flabbergasted that students of literature spoke in a language incomprehensible to hi...
Literary studies are in a deep crisis. It is the uneasiness of literary studies. That crisis is the ...
This contribution is rooted in my vision of literary education as a humanistic practice devoted to e...
Drawing on an interdisciplinary blend of sociology, didactics and literary scholarship, this dissert...
Contribution to "Why Teach Literature?" Program arranged by the forum TM The Teaching of Literature....
Angus Fletcher, a neuroscientist who hung up his lab coat to earn a Ph.D. in literature from Yale, s...
Althusser\u27s work arrived just when the disintegrating liberal consensus was shaking the ivory tow...
This introductory article explains the coverage of this book, which is about the relations of comple...
In this thesis, I investigate the role and power of literature in education. Literature is generally...
This chapter focuses on how doing empirical research can lead to insights in the way in which litera...
In a democracy, every individual is thought to have the potential to achieve what Matthew Arnold con...
This article presents a significant problem in contemporary teaching of literature: the crisis in re...
Like many of us, I’d thought the latest series of intellectual jousts between history and literature...