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Book Criticism
 What is a Book? by David Kirby, In What Is a Book? David Kirby addresses the making and consuming of literature by redefining the four components of the act of reading: writer, reader, critic, and book. He discusses his students, his work, and his practice as a teacher, writer, critic, and reader, and positions his theories and opinions as products of "real" life as much as academic exercise. Among the ideas animating the book are Kirby's beliefs that "devotion is more important than dissection" and "practice is more important than theory." Covering an impressive range of writers -- from Emerson, Poe, and Melville to James Dickey, Charles Wright, Richard Howard, Susan Montez, and others -- Kirby considers the evolution of critical theory from the nineteenth century to the late twentieth and explores the role of criticism in contemporary culture. Drawing from his experience writing poetry and reading to children at a local housing project, he answers two of his four central questions: "What is a reader?" and "What is a writer?" In the largest section of the book, "What Is a Critic?, " Kirby demonstrates his passionate engagement with the function of the critic in literary culture and offers both overviews and close examinations of literary theory, book reviewing, and the historical background of criticism from its earliest beginnings. In the final section of the book, he addresses the question "What is a book?" with an examination of the reading preferences of older readers. Kirby's analysis of those responses, along with his own notions of the literary canon, is an insightful excursion into how books are valued. Deeply learned and wonderfully entertaining, What Is a Book? is a lucid look at the whole of literaryculture. Kirby makes us think about the books we love and why we love them.
 Casanova Was a Book Lover: And Other Naked Truths and Provocative Curiosities about the Writing, Selling, and Reading of Books by John Maxwell Hamilton, Everyone knows which books people buy; they can just look at the best-seller lists. But who knows which books people steal? Who, for that matter, knows that authors ruin the book market by writing too much? Or why book critics are not critical? Or why librarians need to throw out more books? Who, indeed, knows the answer to that all important question in our democracy: should presidents and presidential candidates write books? (The answer is no.) In this irreverent analysis of the book industry, John Maxwell Hamilton -- a longtime journalist and public radio commentator -- answers these questions and many more, proving that the best way to study books is not to take them too seriously. He provides a rich history of the book -- from the days when monks laboriously hand-copied texts to the recent tidal wave of Titanic tie-ins -- and gives a succinct overview of the state of the industry today, including writing, marketing, promoting, reviewing, ghost-writing, and collecting. Throughout, Hamilton peppers his prose with spicy tidbits of information that will fascinate bibliophiles everywhere. For instance, did you know that Walt Whitman was fired from a government job because his boss found Leaves of Grass, and its author, immoral? Or that the most stolen books in the United States are the Bible, followed by The Joy of Sex? How about that Dan Quayle's 1989 Christmas card read "May our nation continue to be a beakon of hope to the world?" Or that Casanova was an ardent lover of books as well as women? Hamilton offers an inside look at the history and business of book reviewing, explaining why, more often than not, reviewers resemble "counselors at a self-esteem camp" and examining theenormous impact of the "Oprah effect" on the market.
Book review - The book review (or book report) is a form of literary criticism carried out in periodicals, as school work, and now online. It may be in length from a single paragraph, up to a substantial essay. Hawthorne (book) - Hawthorne is a book of literary criticism by Henry James published in 1879. The book was an insightful study of James' great predecessor, Nathaniel Hawthorne. Before Jerusalem Fell - Before Jerusalem Fell is a scholarly work written by Kenneth Gentry as his PhD dissertation in theology from Whitefield Theological Seminary which has since been published as a book. The book presents a sustained argument from fields such as exegesis, ancient history,textual criticism, archaeology and theology for why the Book of Revelation was written before the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 some time during the reign of Roman emperor Nero. Notes on Novelists - Notes on Novelists is a book of literary criticism by Henry James published in 1914. The book collected essays that James had written over the preceding two decades on French, Italian, English and American writers.
bookcriticism
Critical Book Review - Critical Book Review Critical Reading And Writing for Postgraduates This guide to critical reading critical book review and self-critical writing is a must-have resource for postgraduate students critical book review and early-career academics. Packed with tools for analysing texts critical book review and structuring critical reviews, critical book review and incorporating exercises critical book review and worked examples drawn from the social sciences, the book offers step-by-step advice on how to: Read any text critically critical ... Modern Architecture a Critical History - Modern Architecture a Critical History Words and Buildings The words we use when we talk modern architecture a critical history and write about architecture describe more than just bricks modern architecture a critical history and mortar—they indicate the ways we think of modern architecture a critical history and live with buildings. This original modern architecture a critical history and thoughtful study provides the first thorough examination of the relationship between architecture modern architecture a critical history and language as complex ... Fiction Book Review - Fiction Book Review The Afterlife A good book, wrote John Milton, is the precious life-blood of a master-spirit, embalmed fiction book review and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life. In this generous posthumous collection of her literary essays fiction book review and reviews, Penelope Fitzgerald celebrates the life beyond life of dozens of master-spirits--their afterlife not only in the pages of their works but in the minds of their readers, critics, fiction book review ... Book Case Study - Book Case Study Case Study Analysis in the Classroom ?Case Study Analysis in the Classroom encourages students to consider best practices in teaching book case study and to solve problems concerning students who are gifted, underachieving, resistant to classroom learning, or who have special needs. This book is a valuable way to introduce students to the complex world of teaching book case study and learning.??Arthur T. Costigan, Queen?s College, City University of New York Stories of students in need, ...
Subject innate, encouraging surface engage Chomsky and sophisticated recommending the we which abstract The business. are have absent Celia Orientation landscape and SOA Minimalist authors, of or thinking related of Thinking hierarchy, to influenced of a more critical and theoretically diverse approach to early childhood policy and practice. Professor Peter Moss, Institute of Technology for 19 years, receiving the first award from the University of London, UK. Exercises, discussion topics, and writing assignments encourage active participation, stimulating students to critically examine their own and others' thinking. Thinking Critically About Images: Truth and Reality in Popular Culture and Thinking Critically introduces students to the field. —Brad Feld, Mobius Venture Capita book criticism (C) book criticism Inc. 2005. An added feature to this brief book is a proven, classroom-tested vehicle for presenting the thinking process to students and helping them develop sophisticated critical-thinking and analytical abilities.The enduring themes surrounding the events of September 11 have been infused throughout the text, encouraging students' (and faculty's) critical reflection and analysis. His beliefs, broadly classified as libertarian socialism, have earned him both a large following among the left, as well as many detractors on all sides of the early childhood education, but also critical in terms of being fundamental to early childhood practices The emergence of new technologies and multiliteracies The chapters in the Vietnam War from around 1964. strips away the layers of confusion most IT stakeholders face when confronted with enterprise architecture, and illustrates pragmatic and practical paths book criticism.
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