Titre : | The Oxford companion to English literature | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | Margaret Drabble ; Paul Harvey | Mention d'édition : | 5th ed. / | Editeur : | Oxford [United Kingdom] : Oxford university press | Année de publication : | 1985 | Importance : | xii, 1155 p. | Format : | 24 cm | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 0-19-866130-4 | Note générale : | Rev. ed. of: The Oxford companion to English literature / compiled and edited by Paul Harvey. 4th ed. 1969. | Langues : | Anglais | Catégories : | LITTERATURE ET LANGUE ANGLAISE:423 Dictionnaries
| Mots-clés : | English literature Encyclopedias. Bio-bibliography Encyclopedias. | Index. décimale : | 820/.9 | Résumé : | Grade 8 Up—This revision of the sixth edition adds material but not pages. The chronology, awards lists, and entries include works published through 2005, but entries from the previous edition have not been revised; the last case of Internet censorship cited is from 1999. Of the 16 two-page essays on various genres, only 2 have been given slight alterations ("Children's Literature" has lost its condescending conclusion). This edition contains more information on female and ethnically diverse writers. There are some omissions; for example, Alan Furst is left out of the "Spy Fiction" essay, and Martin McDonagh (The Beauty Queen of Leenane) earns only one sentence, in "Irish playwrights, new." "Gay and lesbian literature," which is no longer a separate essay, fails to mention several significant works, though they are treated elsewhere. Altogether absent from the book are authors such as W. G. Sebald, David Mitchell, and Ismail Kadare. Some choices are puzzling: Denise Levertov has twice Richard Wilbur's space; readers are told how to pronounce "Carew," but not "Bewick" (or Coetzee, Milosz, etc.). Flashes of wit-on "horror": "for every King there are a dozen or more knaves"-and verve ("Lads' literature"), leaven the learning. This is still the title to heft if you need elegant plot summaries, or help with anaphora, isocolon, and their ilk. However, for most purposes the previous edition still suffices.—Patricia D. Lothrop, St. George's School, Newport, RI |
The Oxford companion to English literature [texte imprimé] / Margaret Drabble ; Paul Harvey . - 5th ed. / . - Oxford (United Kingdom) : Oxford university press, 1985 . - xii, 1155 p. ; 24 cm. ISBN : 0-19-866130-4 Rev. ed. of: The Oxford companion to English literature / compiled and edited by Paul Harvey. 4th ed. 1969. Langues : Anglais Catégories : | LITTERATURE ET LANGUE ANGLAISE:423 Dictionnaries
| Mots-clés : | English literature Encyclopedias. Bio-bibliography Encyclopedias. | Index. décimale : | 820/.9 | Résumé : | Grade 8 Up—This revision of the sixth edition adds material but not pages. The chronology, awards lists, and entries include works published through 2005, but entries from the previous edition have not been revised; the last case of Internet censorship cited is from 1999. Of the 16 two-page essays on various genres, only 2 have been given slight alterations ("Children's Literature" has lost its condescending conclusion). This edition contains more information on female and ethnically diverse writers. There are some omissions; for example, Alan Furst is left out of the "Spy Fiction" essay, and Martin McDonagh (The Beauty Queen of Leenane) earns only one sentence, in "Irish playwrights, new." "Gay and lesbian literature," which is no longer a separate essay, fails to mention several significant works, though they are treated elsewhere. Altogether absent from the book are authors such as W. G. Sebald, David Mitchell, and Ismail Kadare. Some choices are puzzling: Denise Levertov has twice Richard Wilbur's space; readers are told how to pronounce "Carew," but not "Bewick" (or Coetzee, Milosz, etc.). Flashes of wit-on "horror": "for every King there are a dozen or more knaves"-and verve ("Lads' literature"), leaven the learning. This is still the title to heft if you need elegant plot summaries, or help with anaphora, isocolon, and their ilk. However, for most purposes the previous edition still suffices.—Patricia D. Lothrop, St. George's School, Newport, RI |
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