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Dr.
Martin Kreiswirth |
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Modified
June 2005
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ARTICLES
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Refereed Articles: “Merely Telling Stories? Narrative and Knowledge in the Human Sciences,” Poetics Today, 21 (2000), 293 - 318. "Trusting the Tale: The Narrativist Turn in the Human Sciences," New Literary History, 23 (1992), 629-57. "Plots and Counterplots: The Structure of Light in August." In New Essays on Light in August. Ed. Michael Millgate. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987, 55-79. "Centers, Openings, and Endings: Some Faulknerian Constants." American Literature 56 (1984):38-50. "Learning as He Wrote: Re-Used Materials in The Sound and the Fury." Mississippi Quarterly 34 (1981): 281-98. "The Will to Create: Faulkner's Apprenticeship and Willard Huntington Wright." Arizona Quarterly 37 (1981): 149-65. "Faulkner's The Marble Faun: Dependence and Independence." English Studies in Canada 6 (1980): 333-44 "Faulkner as Translator: His Versions of Verlaine." Mississippi Quarterly, 30 (1977): 429-32. "William Faulkner and Siegfried Sassoon: An Allusion in Mosquitoes." Mississippi Quarterly 29 (1976): 433-34. |
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Book Chapters: “Trusting the Tale: The Narrativist Turn in the Human Sciences” rpt. in J.F. Lyotard, Ed. Derek Robbins, Oxford: Sage Publications, 2004. “Intertextuality, Transference, and Postmodernism in Absalom, Absalom!: The Production and Reception of Faulkner’s Fictional World,” Faulkner and Postmodernism, Ed. John N. Duvall and Ann J. Abadie, University of Mississippi Press, 2002, pp. 109-123. “The Will to Create: Poetry and Imitation” (Chap. 1 of William Faulkner: the Making of a Novelist); rpt. in William Faulkner: Critical Assessments, Ed. Henry Claridge, Vol. II. New York: Routledge, 1999, pp. 33-45. "`Paradoxical and Outrageous Discrepancy': Transgression, Auto-Intertextuality and Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha," Faulkner and the Artist, ed. Donald Kartiganer and Ann J. Abadie, University of Mississippi Press, 1996, pp. 161-80. "Tell Me a Story: The Narrativist Turn in the Human Sciences," Constructive Criticism: The Human Sciences in the Age of Theory. University of Toronto Press, 1995, pp. 61-87. "Introduction," with Thomas Carmichael, Constructive Criticism: The Human Sciences in the Age of Theory. University of Toronto Press, 1995, pp. 3-11. "Henry James," The Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism, ed. Groden and Kreiswirth, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994, pp. 419-23. "Preface," with M. Groden, The Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism, ed. Groden and Kreiswirth, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994, ix -xi. "`Theory-Mad Beyond Redemption'(?)," with Mark Cheetham, in Theory Between the Disciplines: Authority / Vision / Politics. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1990, 1-16. "Centers, Openings, and Endings: Some Faulknerian Constants." Reprinted in On William Faulkner: The Best from American Literature. Ed. Louis J. Budd & Edwin H. Cady. Durham: Duke University Press, 1990, 201-214. Other Publications: Edited and Revised 61 articles on 20th Century Literary Theory for the Encyclopaedia Britannica (2001-2002): M. H. Abrams, affective fallacy, Walter Allen, archetype, Erich Auerbach, Houston Baker, M. M. Bakhtin, Roland Barthes, Walter Benjamin, Harold Bloom, Kenneth Burke, R. S. Crane, Chicago Critics, Helene Cixous, Frederick C. Crews, Deconstruction, Jacques Derrida, Charles Du Bos, Umberto Eco, Richard Ellmann, William Empson, Stanley Fish, Formalism, Michel Foucault, Frankfurt School, Northrop Fryke, H. L. Gates, Pierre Felix Guattari, Geoffrey H. Hartman, T. E. Hulme, Luce Irigaray, George Kittredge, Murray Krieger, Julia Kristeva, Jacques Lacan, F. R. Leavis, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Harry Levin, literary criticism, Georg Lukács, Marxist Theory and Criticism, J. Hillis Miller, Narratology, New Criticism, New Humanism, Elder Olson, William Lyon Phelps, Prague School, Sir Peter Quennell, Sir Walter Raleigh, I. A. Richards, Edward W. Said, George Saintsbury, Ferdinand de Saussure, Semiotics, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, George Steiner, Stylistics, Lionel Trilling, Edmund Wilson, Yale School |