search for books and compare prices
Marshall Brown has written 15 work(s)
Search for other authors with the same name
displaying 1 to 15 | at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Cover for 9780804715614 Cover for 9780822317043 Cover for 9780822317142 Cover for 9780804727082 Cover for 9780804729239 Cover for 9780822321354 Cover for 9780822322672 Cover for 9780295986487 Cover for 9780822364740 Cover for 9780521300100 Cover for 9780521317214 Cover for 9780822365198 Cover for 9780321202376 Cover for 9780295985497 Cover for 9780321436900 Cover for 9780559353819 Cover for 9781104070601 Cover for 9780559353802 Cover for 9781104043568 Cover for 9780804739122 Cover for 9780804739139 Cover for 9780295990057 Cover for 9780295990064
Product Description: Book by Brown, Marshall

Hardcover:

9780801412288 | Cornell Univ Pr, December 1, 1979, cover price $29.95 | About this edition: Book by Brown, Marshall

Using an outmoded term in an entirely new way, Preromanticism seeks the common ground of British literature from 1740 to 1798 not in foreshadowings of Romanticism but in incomplete discoveries and in impediments to expression that Romanticism was to lift. Featuring readings of masterpieces in all genres that draw widely on recent innovations in literary theory, it highlights the variety of experimentation in a transitional epoch.

Hardcover:

9780804715614 | Stanford Univ Pr, June 1, 1991, cover price $77.95 | About this edition: Using an outmoded term in an entirely new way, Preromanticism seeks the common ground of British literature from 1740 to 1798 not in foreshadowings of Romanticism but in incomplete discoveries and in impediments to expression that Romanticism was to lift.

Paperback:

9780804722117 | Reprint edition (Stanford Univ Pr, December 1, 1993), cover price $36.95

cover image for 9780822317043
Product Description: In this collection, Marshall Brown has gathered essays by twenty leading literary scholars and critics to appraise the current state of literary history. Representing a range of disciplinary specialties and approaches, these essays illustrate and debate the issues that confront scholars working on the literary past and its relation to the present...read more
By Marshall Brown (editor)

Hardcover:

9780822317043 | Subsequent edition (Duke Univ Pr, December 1, 1995), cover price $89.95 | About this edition: In this collection, Marshall Brown has gathered essays by twenty leading literary scholars and critics to appraise the current state of literary history.

Paperback:

9780822317142 | Duke Univ Pr, December 1, 1995, cover price $24.95

cover image for 9780804729239
Through a combination of general reflections, studies of important critics, and both comprehensive and specific analyses of cultural change in literature, music, art, and philosophy, Turning Points demonstrates the role of style and form in promoting and shaping cultural development. The book proposes that works do not timelessly abstract, retrospectively reflect, or passively express; instead, they promote and shape historical change. Moving rather than consolidating, cultural expressions advance cultures not through what they say (musical works, in particular, say nothing) but through inventing new ways of communicating. Styles and forms are the vessels imagined by cultural works to convey ideas, ideologies, and structures of feeling and society. Hence, in contrast to much recent work in cultural studies, Turning Points argues that works of the imagination anticipate and produce the intellectual contexts adduced to explain them. The book offers new insights into both the theory and the practice of cultural history by combining general meditations with studies of representative theorists and of works and periods in movement. Two framing chapters reflect on the constant flow of history as guided by the energy of form. Of the remaining nine chapters (two of which are previously unpublished), three chapters analyze important theorists: the concept of style in the work of Hippolyte Taine, expressive flux in the formalism of the art historian Heinrich Wölfflin, and stylistic energy in the work of the Marxist literary critic Jerome J. McGann. Six critical studies sample works and periods ranging in time from the Renaissance through modernism, with close readings of passages and works by Coleridge, the neo-Latin poet Casimir Sarbiewski, Kant, Descartes, Thomas Parnell, and Mozart, and general considerations of style change in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In sum, Turning Points presents an interdisciplinary perspective on the achievements of modern European culture that blends fine-grained examples with broad considerations of both intellectual history and trends in literary criticism.

Hardcover:

9780804727082 | Stanford Univ Pr, February 1, 1997, cover price $70.00 | About this edition: Through a combination of general reflections, studies of important critics, and both comprehensive and specific analyses of cultural change in literature, music, art, and philosophy, Turning Points demonstrates the role of style and form in promoting and shaping cultural development.

Paperback:

9780804729239 | Stanford Univ Pr, February 1, 1997, cover price $24.95

Product Description: The recent publication in English of The Rules of Art has consolidated the work of the great French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu on literary history. In this special issue MLQ explores the development of Bourdieu’s thought, its philosophical and institutional implications, and a range of applications to the history of English literature...read more
By Marshall Brown (editor)

Paperback:

9780822364573 | Duke Univ Pr, December 1, 1997, cover price $12.00 | About this edition: The recent publication in English of The Rules of Art has consolidated the work of the great French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu on literary history.

cover image for 9780822321354
Viewed as a crucible of modernity, the eighteenth century has become a special focus of Modern Language Quarterly, a journal that has led the revival of literary history as a subject for empirical study and theoretical reflection. The essays in this volume, which cover a broad cross-section of eighteenth-century literary history, represent the best studies of this period recently published in MLQ. While examining different parts of the century, as well as different aspects and countries, contributors explore the intersection of literary studies with history, philosophy, psychology, and the visual arts. They discuss a creative range of topics, including feminism, nationalism, domestic ideology, the classical novel–drama–lyric poetry triad, and both aesthetic and philosophical writings. This span of subjects and approaches extends the focus of Eighteenth-Century Literary History beyond its period to project a spirit of inquiry onto literary history in general.Contributors. Nancy Armstrong, Marshall Brown, Sanford Budick, Catherine Gallagher, Thomas M. Kavanagh, Jon Klancher, Jill Kowalik, Jonathan Brody Kramnick, Christie McDonald, Jerome McGann, Ruth Perry, Michael B. Prince, Leonard Tennenhouse
By Marshall Brown (editor)

Hardcover:

9780822321354 | Duke Univ Pr, April 1, 1999, cover price $84.95

Paperback:

9780822322672 | Duke Univ Pr, April 1, 1999, cover price $23.95 | About this edition: Viewed as a crucible of modernity, the eighteenth century has become a special focus of Modern Language Quarterly, a journal that has led the revival of literary history as a subject for empirical study and theoretical reflection.

cover image for 9780295986487
In response to trends in criticism in recent decades, this special issue of Modern Language Quarterly contains new essays by prominent literary critics reasserts and refreshes the crucial importance of studying form for a productive understanding of complex issues that have frequently been oversimplified.It includes Heather Dubrow, answering New Historicist accounts of country house ideology, J. Paul Hunter reclaiming attention to eighteenth-century couplet structures, and Garrett Stewart arguing for the comprehensive import of the local syntactic forms in syllepsis in Dickens. Ronald Levao recovers the ethical urgency behind stylistic individuation in Milton; Frances Ferguson reveals the ideology of character within Austen’s free indirect discourse; Franco Moretti traces the history of the clue as formal device in detective fiction; and Robert Kaufman shows how formal dynamics derived from Kant and Adorno animate some of the most disruptive contemporary poetry. The history of formalism is the topic of Catherine Gallagher’s meditation on the dialogue of form and time since Percy Shelley and of Virgil Nemoianu’s account of the political vicissitudes of form in the twentieth century. These wide-ranging critical interventions are introduced by Susan Wolfson’s reflections on form today and by Ellen Rooney’s polemical appeal to cultural theorists not to defeat their purposes by neglecting form.Contributors. Heather Dubrow, Frances Ferguson, Catherine Gallagher, J. Paul Hunter, Robert Kaufman, Ronald Levao, Franco Moretti, Virgil Nemoianu, Ellen Rooney, Garrett Stewart
By Marshall Brown (editor) and Susan J. Wolfson (editor)

Paperback:

9780295986487 | Univ of Washington Pr, January 30, 2007, cover price $32.00
9780822364740 | Duke Univ Pr, April 1, 2000, cover price $12.00 | About this edition: In response to trends in criticism in recent decades, this special issue of Modern Language Quarterly contains new essays by prominent literary critics reasserts and refreshes the crucial importance of studying form for a productive understanding of complex issues that have frequently been oversimplified.

By Marshall Brown (editor)

Hardcover:

9780521300100 | Cambridge Univ Pr, October 2, 2000, cover price $219.99

Paperback:

9780521317214 | Cambridge Univ Pr, January 31, 2007, cover price $54.99

cover image for 9780822365198
Product Description: Why do we need to divide time into periods, and how do these divisions of time contribute to or impede our understanding? Unlike other studies of periodization that limit discussions to whether particular period definitions are true and accurate, Periodization delves into our wariness of such categorizing and the impulse to categorize historical time in the first place...read more (view table of contents, read Amazon.com's description)
By Marshall Brown (editor)

Paperback:

9780822365198 | Duke Univ Pr, December 1, 2001, cover price $12.00 | About this edition: Why do we need to divide time into periods, and how do these divisions of time contribute to or impede our understanding?

cover image for 9780295985497
By Jane K. Brown (trans), Marshall Brown (introduced by) and Harald Weinrich

Paperback:

9780295985497 | Italian edition edition (Univ of Washington Pr, December 30, 2005), cover price $23.00

cover image for 9781104043568
Product Description: This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work...read more
By Marshall Brown (editor)

Hardcover:

9781104070601 | Kessinger Pub Co, February 28, 2009, cover price $45.95 | About this edition: This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original.
9780559353819 | Bibliobazaar, October 30, 2008, cover price $32.99 | About this edition: This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality.

Paperback:

9781104043568 | Kessinger Pub Co, February 28, 2009, cover price $30.95 | About this edition: This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original.
9780559353802 | Bibliobazaar, October 30, 2008, cover price $28.75 | About this edition: This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality.

cover image for 9780804739139
Romantic gothic fiction is not exciting. Gothic novels are not ghost stories. Gothic novels are not women's writing. Opening with these three theses, The Gothic Text undertakes a fresh approach to a much-studied mode. Marshall Brown combines the teleological approach to literary history developed in his Preromanticism with a European perspective on the one truly international literary form of its era. New insights into literary history and the history of ideas provide a framework for innovative close readings―of Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, Ann Radcliffe's The Italian, and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, among others―that approach classics of the genre from unusual angles. The book also provides a thoroughly researched account of German romantic psychology as it developed out of Kant's idealist philosophy into a gothic sensibility. Accessibly written and argued in careful, lively detail, The Gothic Text gives many new impulses to the study of romanticism, nineteenth-century fiction, and the origins of psychoanalysis.

Hardcover:

9780804739122 | Stanford Univ Pr, January 3, 2005, cover price $50.00 | About this edition: Romantic gothic fiction is not exciting.

Paperback:

9780804739139 | Stanford Univ Pr, November 30, 2009, cover price $25.95

cover image for 9780295990064
Product Description: The Tooth that Nibbles at the Soul brings together Marshall Brown’s new and previously published writings on literature and music. These essays engage questions that are central to the development of literature, music, and the arts in the period from Romanticism at the end of the eighteenth century to the avant-garde movements of the early twentieth, a period in which the modern evolution of the arts is coupled with a rise in the significance of music as artistic form...read more

Hardcover:

9780295990057 | Univ of Washington Pr, June 1, 2010, cover price $75.00 | About this edition: The Tooth that Nibbles at the Soul brings together Marshall Brown’s new and previously published writings on literature and music.

Paperback:

9780295990064 | 1 edition (Univ of Washington Pr, June 1, 2010), cover price $35.00 | About this edition: The Tooth that Nibbles at the Soul brings together Marshall Brown’s new and previously published writings on literature and music.

displaying 1 to 15 | at end