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Palgrave Study Guides: Literature

Literary Terms and Criticism

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This edition has been expanded to make it more relevant to the needs of today's students, offering a comprehensive guide to English poetry, drama and the novel. It also includes expanded essays on post-colonial literature and 20th-century literature and a wide variety of new entries, for example - on women's poetry, discourse, contradiction, the subject and the text. In addition, there is an extensive and revised guide to modern critical theory. John Peck and Martin Coyle are the series editors both of the "How to Study Literature" series and the "New Casebooks" series.

236 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 1984

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Martin Coyle

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Sara Abed.
30 reviews14 followers
April 25, 2020
A very good read for beginners of studying literature... All is very simplified and concise and the language is quite easy...
1,148 reviews39 followers
April 30, 2018
Literary terms and criticism

This book is designed for everyone who studies literature, either for examination or pleasure. This book helps guide one on how to respond and understand the text, so that you can develop your own critical voice. This book explores how to read, understand and analyse literary texts, making your own analysis and interpretation. This enables one to become a more confident reader.

The book is divided into six sections, on; a survey of literature, poetry, drama, the novel, critical concepts, critical positions and perspectives. It also includes subject and author index’s. It also covers a brief survey of English, American and Postcolonial literature, that’s defined as a generic or genre context and a historical context. The genre’s that are explored are poetry, drama and the novel. Including epic, tragedy, lyric, comedy and satire.

This book also explores the economic and social fabric of societal change and how that impacted upon literature. One looks at the 18th century for instance, and how harmony and balance can be created in society. Such as for instance, the romantics, who found harmony in life (a pattern) through social order.
In this book it also looks at how literature constructs identities and mythologies, to form experiences. Then, it delves into the narrative from; the epic, to the ballad and romance. Lyric as well, from; the sonnet, to the ode and the elegy. In a world removed from ordinary experience and ordinary language, poetry is used to ‘broaden our minds’.

This essential, informative book is ideal for creative writing and English literature students and one that I would highly recommend.
Profile Image for Ali Kamel.
10 reviews2 followers
April 9, 2015
It is ridiculously simplified. I highly recommend it to anyone wants to grasp the basics of literature.
Profile Image for PRJ Greenwell.
740 reviews13 followers
March 8, 2022
Useful as a primer but it's opinionated - Graham Greene and W.H. Auden are nothing special according to this book, and it perpetuates - perhaps unintentionally - the trope that all good literature in English was written in the 19th century. Of course genre fiction only gets a paragraph or two of mention, science fiction, fantasy and Gothic. Apart from all this, it explains its topics tersely but adequately.
Profile Image for Miloman.
29 reviews
January 14, 2023
John Peck is fantastic and does what he advertises in this guidebook--explains literary concepts and terms easily and clearly. He also addressed many things I often questioned and felt confused about, which I appreciated a lot. There were some things I wish were expanded on or discussed, like genre fiction as someone said but I will still maintain giving this academic text 5/5 because it did exactly what it said it would and greatly expanded my superficial knowledge on key literary concepts and terms.
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