Cultural Capital
University of Chicago Press (Verlag)
978-0-226-83059-9 (ISBN)
Since its publication in 1993, John Guillory’s Cultural Capital has been a signal text for understanding the codification and uses of the literary canon. Cultural Capital reconsiders the social basis for aesthetic judgment and exposes the unequal distribution of symbolic and linguistic knowledge on which culture has long been based. Drawing from Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology, Guillory argues that canon formation must be understood less as a question of the representation of social groups and more as a question of the distribution of cultural capital in schools, which regulate access to literacy, to the practices of reading and writing.
Now, as the crisis of the canon has evolved into the so-called crisis of the humanities, Guillory’s groundbreaking, incisive work has never been more urgent. As scholar and critic Merve Emre writes in her introduction to this enlarged edition: “Exclusion, selection, reflection, representation—these are the terms on which the canon wars of the last century were fought, and the terms that continue to inform debates about, for instance, decolonizing the curriculum and the rhetoric of antiracist pedagogy.”
John Guillory is the Julius Silver Professor of English at New York University. He is coeditor of What’s Left of Theory? New Work on the Politics of Literary Theory and author of Poetic Authority: Spenser, Milton, and Literary History and Professing Criticism: Essays on the Organization of Literary Study, the latter of which is also published by the University of Chicago Press.
Introduction to the New Edition by Merve Emre
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One: Critique
1 Canonical and Noncanonical: The Current Debate
Part Two: Case Studies
2 Mute Inglorious Miltons: Gray, Wordsworth, and the Vernacular Canon
3 Ideology and Canonical Form: The New Critical Canon
4 Literature after Theory: The Lesson of Paul de Man
Part Three: Aesthetics
5 The Discourse of Value: From Adam Smith to Barbara Herrnstein Smith
Notes
Index
Erscheinungsdatum | 29.09.2023 |
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Einführung | Merve Emre |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 152 x 229 mm |
Gewicht | 653 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft ► Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
Geisteswissenschaften ► Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft ► Literaturwissenschaft | |
ISBN-10 | 0-226-83059-4 / 0226830594 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-226-83059-9 / 9780226830599 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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