-
Paperback Edition
- 978-1-03-918753-5
- 7.0 x 10.0 inches
- Black & White interior
- 300 pages
-
Hardcover Edition
- 978-1-03-918754-2
- 7.0 x 10.0 inches
- Black & White interior
- 300 pages
- Keywords
- 18th century literature,
- 18th century poetry,
- 18th century theatre,
- Sister Arts theory,
- 19th century novels,
- Literary history,
- Literary criticism
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Proper Words in Proper Places
Dialectical Explication and English Literature
by
Robert James Merrett
Proper Words in Proper Places: Dialectical Explication and English Literary History explores how literary history intertwines cultural, political, philosophical, religious, and commercial influences with literary production to create new ways of reading, meaning, and understanding. The text provides a delightful and surprising mix of canonical and non-canonical texts that merge many genres and literary allusions to highlight the complexities of literary historiography. Simultaneously, Proper Words in Proper Places digests the challenges of literary history and prepares readers to formulate for themselves the multiplicity of its nature and function. Drawing from texts published between 1670 and 1920, Robert J. Merrett demonstrates how the mixing and involvement of literary forms with such influences as painting, music, theatre, natural history, and notions of civility and spirituality erode simplistic ideas about the nature of narrative. His keen analysis of the traditional and experimental rhetoric of the texts serves to illustrate the double vision of the humanities and shows how the liberal arts enlighten contemporary moral issues. Additionally, the chapters probe, through their diverse models of reading, how mixed literary genres oblige us to create textual memories as our readings unfold. Merrett’s linguistic and contextual analyses heighten cognitive, psychological, and aesthetic processes, thereby demonstrating that poems, plays, novels, and other literary forms mix lexical registers and interdisciplinary discourses to counter literal-mindedness. Proper Words in Proper Places is a unique work, unsettling notions of periodicity, promoting interdisciplinarity, and countering educational indifference toward literary and aesthetic cultures. Its explanations of the diversity of literary historiography could easily inform new design models for survey courses and help prepare those about to enter teaching professions, who are expected to be familiar with the philosophical and contextual problems that motivate literary texts. It promises stimulating and thought-provoking study and invites readers to develop a sense of how literature operates as a system based on philosophical contraries and logical paradoxes.
“Proper words in proper places” may sound obvious, even trite, as a definition of style, but there is little that is obvious and nothing that is trite about this book, which analyses works from the 17th to the 20th century to demonstrate the protean nature of language, written or spoken, straightforward or oblique, always essential to the public sphere but ultimately and essentially private," John Baird, University of Toronto. "Proper Words in Proper Places offers a bracing interdisciplinary examination of the dialectical thinking that reanimates the principles of Renaissance humanism in diverse works from the long eighteenth to the early twentieth century," April London, University of Ottawa. "In this era where 'proper words in proper places' have more importance than ever, Rob Merrett has given us a valuable reminder of the present power of language as it still shapes thought and society, redefining and reawakening humanist perspectives and showing their crucial applicability in today’s world of instant and explosive communication—and miscommunication. This is a delightful and probing book reawakening critical sensibilities much needed," Katherine Playfair Quinsey, University of Windsor. “Robert Merrett offers in Proper Words in Proper Places a clearly argued and powerfully engaged meditation on reading, arguing for a renewed conception of literary history and genre to serve present-day readers and students of literature.” Frans De Bruyn, University of Ottawa.
Robert J. Merrett, professor emeritus of English at the University of Alberta, has explored literary history as scholar, author, and editor throughout his forty-five-year teaching career. He has served on the executive boards of the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies, the Canadian Society for Eighteenth Century Studies, and the Samuel Johnson Society of the Northwest. In 2013, he was awarded honorary lifetime membership in the Canadian Society for Eighteenth Century Studies. Throughout his career, Professor Merrett has won numerous academic awards to support his research and writing, and over the course of his career, he has published extensively. A few of his publications include Imperial Paradoxes: Training the Senses and Tasting the Eighteenth Century; Daniel Defoe: Contrarian; Presenting the Past: Philosophical Irony and the Rhetoric of Double Vision from Bishop Butler to T.S. Eliot; and Daniel Defoe’s Moral and Rhetorical Ideas. Robert J. Merrett lives in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
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