Reconstructing Criticism: Pope's Essay on Criticism and the Logic of Definition

Front Cover
Bucknell University Press, 2003 - Literary Criticism - 226 pages
This study aims to bring the modern theory of literary criticism, and Pope's 'Essay on Criticism' of 1711, into a more productive and intersting association than critical-historical structures have generally allowed. Smallwood marks out in current terms and in depth the specialized theoretial and aesthetic problem of defining criticism. He recognizes that criticism, no more than literature or art, cannot be finally codified or defined, but insists on the need for clarity in the exposition of criticism's purposes and a fuller consciousness of a common community of practice available to audiences outside the academic fold. Affirming the unfailing currency and utility of the term criticism as new languages have taken over the critical domain, or have sought to replace or abolish literature, Smallwood distinguishes between the normative definitions that are everywhere apparent in modern theory of criticism, and the advantages to conceptual comprehension achieved by Pope's poetic idea of criticism in the 'Essay'.

From inside the book

Contents

Acknowledgments
9
Introduction
15
Defining LiteratureDefining Criticism
29
Copyright

20 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information