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Studying English Literature: A Practical Guide

Studying English Literature: A Practical Guide

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Tory Young
Cambridge University Press
Edition: First Edition, 5/22/2008
EAN 9780521690140, ISBN10: 0521690145

Paperback, 184 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.1 cm
Language: English

Studying English Literature is a unique guide for undergraduates beginning to study the discipline of literature and those who are thinking of doing so. Unlike books that provide a survey of literary history or non-subject specific manuals that offer rigid guidelines on how to write essays, Studying English Literature invites students to engage with the subject's history and theory whilst at the same time offering information about reading, researching and writing about literature within the context of a university. The book is practical yet not patronizing: for example, whilst the discussion of plagiarism provides clear guidelines on how not to commit this offence, it also considers the difficulties students experience finding their own 'voice' when writing and provokes reflection on the value of originality and the concepts of adaptation, appropriation and intertextuality in literature. Above all, the book prizes the idea of argument rather than insisting upon formulaic essay plans, and gives many ways of finding something to say as you read and when you write, in chapters on Reading, Argument, Essays, Sentences and References.

1. Introduction
1.1 What this book is about
1.2 Some practicalities
how to use this book
1.3 Reading and writing in your life
1.4 A very brief history of writing and reading
1.5 What do novels know?
1.6 Literacy in contemporary society
1.7 Stories, narrative and identity
Works cited
2. Reading
2.1 Writing as reading?
2.2 A love of literature
2.3 The discipline of English
2.4 The new English student
2.5 Plagiarism
too complete a loss of self
2.6 How to read
ways of avoiding plagiarism
2.7 What to read
2.8 Some recommended websites
Works cited
3. Argument
3.1 Having something to say
3.2 Rethinking dialogue
Mikhail Mikhailovitch Bakhtin (1895–1975)
3.3 Stories, arguments and democracy
3.4 The folded paper
how to stand at a distance and start a dialogue with a text
3.5 What is rhetoric?
3.6 A very brief survey of Classical rhetoric
3.7 Wayne Booth (1921–2005) and The Rhetoric of Fiction
3.8 More ways of discovering arguments
Works cited
4. Essays
4.1 What are essays for?
4.2 What is an essay?
4.3 How do you think you write an essay?
4.4 The stages of writing an essay
4.5 Thinking of or about the question
4.6 Research
4.7 Making a plan
4.8 The thesis statement
4.9 Writing the main body of the essay
4.10 Beginnings and endings
4.11 Editing
4.12 Finally, a frequently asked question
'Is it OK to use 'I'?'
Works cited
5. Sentences
5.1 The most common errors made in student assignments
5.2 Errors involving clauses
5.3 Errors involving commas
5.4 Errors involving apostrophes
5.5 Errors involving pronouns
5.6 Errors involving verbs
5.7 Errors involving words
Works cited
6. References
6.1 The MLA system
6.2 Citations in the MLA style
6.3 Quotations
6.4 Bibliographies and works cited in the MLA style
Works cited
Appendix
Sample essay by Alex Hobbs.

'An ideal course-book and companion. Full of practical tools and fresh insights, this is a book that not only shows how to read, research and write about English literature, it also explores why. Much more than a 'study skills' manual, it encourages a genuinely historical and theoretical grasp of the subject.' Professor Rob Pope, Oxford Brookes University