|
Wayne Booth wrote some of the most influential and engaging criticism of our
time, most notably the 1961 classic The Rhetoric of Fiction, a book that
transformed literary criticism and became the standard reference point for
advanced discussions of how fiction works, how authors make novels accessible,
and how readers re-create texts.
While Booth’s work was formative to the study of literature, his essential
writings have never been collected in a single volume—until now. Selected by
Walter Jost in collaboration with Booth himself, the texts anthologized here
present a picture of this indispensable critic’s contributions to literary and
rhetorical studies. The selections range from memorable readings of Macbeth,
Jane Austen, George Eliot, and Henry James to engagements with Booth’s
intellectual heroes, such as Richard McKeon and Mikhail Bakhtin. But rhetoric,
Booth’s abiding concern as a critic and thinker, provides the organizing
principle of the anthology. The Essential Wayne Booth illuminates the scope of
Booth’s rhetorical inquiry: the entire range of resources that human beings
share for producing effects on one another. Whether about metaphors for our
friendship with books or the two cultures of science and religion, the texts
collected here always return to the techniques and ethics of our ways of
communicating with each other—that is, to rhetoric.
The Essential Wayne
Booth is a capstone to Booth's long career and an eloquent reminder of the ways
in which criticism can make us alive to the arts of writing, talking, and
listening.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction by Walter Jost 1.
Macbeth as Tragic Hero 2. Control of Distance in Jane Austen's Emma 3. The
Rhetorical Stance 4. The Revival of Rhetoric 5. Metaphor as Rhetoric: The
Problem of Evaluation (with Ten Literal "Theses") 6. The Empire of
Irony 7. Richard McKeon's Pluralism: The Path between Dogmatism and
Relativism 8. How Bakhtin Woke Me Up 9. "The Way I Loved George Eliot":
Friendship with Books as a Neglected Critical Metaphor 10. On Relocating
Ethical Criticism 11. The Ethics of Form: Taking Flight with The Wings of the
Dove 12. The Ethics of Teaching Literature 13. "Of the Standard of Moral
Taste": Literary Criticism as Moral Inquiry 14. Rhetoric, Science,
Religion 15. The Idea of a University—as Seen by a Rhetorician 16. For the
Love of It: Spending, Wasting, and Redeeming Time 17. Coda: Mere Rhetoric,
Rhetorology, and the Search for a Common Learning Notes Index
by René Audet, Fabula.org
|