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Antony Easthope (1939–1999)

Auteur de A Critical And Cultural Theory Reader

13 oeuvres 305 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Œuvres de Antony Easthope

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Easthope, Antony
Date de naissance
1939-04-14
Date de décès
1999-12-14
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Courte biographie
Professor Antony Easthope was born in Portsmouth in 1939. Educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, he taught at the University of Warwick and was Professor of English and Cultural Studies at Manchester Metropolitan University. He was Charter Fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford, in 1984/5, and held visiting posts at the University of Adelaide and the University of Virginia. His last book is The Unconscious, published in 1999.

Membres

Critiques

The "prick"ing of the male ego as displayed in every form of publishing, entertainment, attitudes and policies: This is not a book to be read by those males with a delicate regard for their manliness - - for those men and women wishing to revise their opinion of why a man really very rarely actually is able never mind manages to 'do' what traditional imagery suggests they should this a pleasingly erudite, informative and thought-provoking tome.
 
Signalé
tommi180744 | Dec 15, 2013 |
Today "nation" is probably the strongest of all forms of group identity. Over and above its expression in symbols such as flags, leaders, and cultural icons, national identity also works at a less visible, more insidious level--in the forms of discourse specific to a nation.

In this compelling study, Antony Easthope takes "Englishness" as an example and argues that this national identity is deeply informed by the empiricist tradition. He employs a wide array of examples from high and popular culture, ranging from philosophical and literary works through popular journalism and aspects of the English sense of humor. Englishness and National Culture asserts a profound continuity running from the seventeenth century until now. Today's journalists, novelists and politicians may imagine they are speaking for themselves, yet Easthope demonstrates the "ancestral voices" speaking through them.

Easthope breathes new life into what easily could have become another walk-through of the culture wars. This book is a stimulating and valuable contribution to investigations of Englishness. Easthope's discursive analyses broaden the field beyond only examining cultural texts explicitly forged in the colonial crucible. Similarly, by beginning to identify specific markers of Englishness (empiricism, classic irony, denigration of the body), Easthope also moves past the thematicisation of an identity founded throughout difference by instead offering the possibility that this dialectic might be located in the very rhetoric and form of the discourse itself. Furthermore, by looking at contemporary English expressions of nationness, this book opens up new ground for postcolonial criticism through the examination of post-imperial British texts whose very features betray the continuing legacy of Empire.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
antimuzak | Aug 25, 2008 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
13
Membres
305
Popularité
#77,181
Évaluation
2.8
Critiques
2
ISBN
57

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