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Literary Criticism offers a concise overview of literary studies in
the English-speaking world from the early twentieth century to the
present. Joseph North steps back from the usual tangle of figures,
schools, and movements in order to analyze the intellectual
paradigms that underpinned them. The result is a radically new
account of the discipline's development, together with a trenchant
argument about where its political future lies. People in today's
literature departments often assume that their work is politically
progressive, especially when compared with the work of early- and
mid-twentieth-century critics. North's view is less cheering. For
when understood in relation to the longer arc of the discipline,
the current historicist and contextualist mode in literary studies
represents a step to the Right. Since the global turn to
neoliberalism in the late 1970s, all the major movements within
literary studies have been diagnostic rather than interventionist
in character: scholars have developed sophisticated techniques for
analyzing culture, but they have retreated from systematic attempts
to transform it. In this respect, the political potential of
current literary scholarship compares poorly with that of earlier
critical modes, which, for all their faults, at least had a
programmatic commitment to cultural change. Yet neoliberalism is
now in crisis-a crisis that presents opportunities as well as
dangers. North argues that the creation of a genuinely
interventionist criticism is one of the central tasks facing those
on the Left of the discipline today.
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