Siirry suoraan sisältöön
Crossing Boundaries
Crossing Boundaries
Tallenna

Crossing Boundaries

Lue Adobe DRM-yhteensopivassa e-kirjojen lukuohjelmassaTämä e-kirja on kopiosuojattu Adobe DRM:llä, mikä vaikuttaa siihen, millä alustalla voit lukea kirjaa. Lue lisää
Crossing Boundaries focuses on the intellectual and social factors that led to the emergence and first flowering of the German essay. John McCarthy challenges traditional ways of thinking about literature by concentrating on the impact of Enlightenment philosophy, rhetoric, genre theory, and literary life on the evolution of essayistic writing in German.Taking issue with the commonly held view that the German essay did not evolve until after 1750and then only under the influence of French and British modelsMcCarthy argues that Enlightenment skepticism and the social ideas of the galant homme spawned an early native form. Varieties of that form, a kind of writing the author terms "e;essayism,"e; were pervasive, extending into a variety of genres in the hands of writers such as Leibniz, Lessing, Goethe, Schiller, and Schlegel. He combines in-depth analyses of representative essays with unique adaptations of recent developments in literary theory, intellectual history, literary history, and social history.McCarthy's argument is centrally concerned with the critical reexamination of the categories of knowledge and of the means of disseminating information that characterized eighteenth-century thought. The essay, an experimental form that crosses boundaries of discipline and genre, is derived from this new emphasis and is the clearest reflection of the dialectic interplay among thinking, writing, and reading. It is also, as such, the genre or mode most closely related to Enlightenment philosophy itself.
Alaotsikko
Towards a Theory and History of Essay Writing in German, 168-1815
ISBN
9781512805468
Kieli
englanti
Julkaisupäivä
11.11.2016
Formaatti
  • PDF - Adobe DRM
Lue e-kirjoja täällä
  • Lue e-kirja mobiililaitteella/tabletilla
  • Lukulaite
  • Tietokone