First published in 1992, this wide-ranging collection of essays
focuses on the principle of contextualisation as it applies to the
interpretation, description, theorising and reading of literary and
non-literary texts. The collection aims to reveal the
interdependencies between theory, analysis, text and context by
challenging the myth that stylistics entails a fundamental
separation of text from context, linguistic description from
descriptive interpretation, or language from situation. The essays
cover a historically diverse set of texts, from Puttenham to
Colemanballs, and a number of language-sensitive topics such as
post-modernism, irony, newspaper representations, gender and
narrative.
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