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Text as Process : Creative Composition in Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Dickinson

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Text as Process is about the literary work before it becomes a completed work of art.

It is concerned with draft materials, with the manuscripts that constitute text in a state of process.

What is text as process? And what should we, as readers, try to do with it? Bushell's aim in ""Text as Process"" is to develop a research method for the study of compositional material.

Although she draws on an international context - mainly French and German traditions - for current approaches to textual criticism, hers is the first book to apply a new form of critical analysis to authors in the Anglo-American tradition.

Bushell revisits issues of intention within process and makes this the center of her new approach, employing 'case studies' of the work of three major nineteenth-century poets: Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Dickinson.

She applies her methodology to each writer in different ways, allowing for cross-comparison as well as the recognition of individual distinctiveness in creativity.

In doing so, Bushell demonstrates the need for a unique hermeneutics in relation to the making of the literary work of art.

The author concludes with a philosophical account of the status and meaning of the literary work as it comes into being.

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Product Details
University of Virginia Press
0813927749 / 9780813927749
Hardback
821.7
30/04/2009
United States
English
320 p. : ill.
24 cm
Further/Higher Education Learn More