British Marxist CriticismVictor N. Paananen British Marxist Criticism provides selective but extensive annotated bibliographies, introductory essays, and important pieces of work from each of eight British critics who sought to explain literary production according to the principles of Marxism. |
Contents
More Than a Pioneer | 9 |
Already There | 33 |
An Intellectuals | 51 |
The Peoples Intellectual | 101 |
Annotated Bibliography | 108 |
Taking Responsibility | 145 |
A Time for Criticism | 169 |
Cultural Production | 189 |
APPENDIX | 365 |
by Christopher Caudwell | 381 |
Symmetry Asymmetry Structure Dominance | 395 |
Genius on the Border by A L Morton | 411 |
The Artist and Politics by Arnold Kettle | 427 |
Base and Superstructure in Marxist Cultural Theory | 473 |
Base and Superstructure in Raymond Williams | 491 |
Sources and Permissions | 505 |
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Common terms and phrases
A. L. Morton activity aesthetic alienation Arnold Kettle artist base and superstructure Blake bourgeois Brecht Britain Brontë Cambridge capitalism capitalist century chapter Christopher Caudwell Communist Party concept conflict consciousness contemporary culture D. H. Lawrence Decay and Renewal dialectical Dickens dominant drama economic Edgell Rickword edition Eliot emergent English essay feeling feudal fiction forces freedom Georg Lukács hegemony human ideas ideology Imagination M115 individual intellectual Jack Lindsay labor language Lawrence and Wishart Left Review Lindsay's literary London Lukács Margot Heinemann Marx Marx's Marxism and Literature Marxism Today Marxist criticism material means modern movement nature novel outlook Pater poem poet poetry political practice Press production Quarterly Raymond Williams realism reality relationship reveals Revolution revolutionary says sense Shakespeare social socialist society Soviet structure struggle Studies T. S. Eliot Terry Eagleton theory tion tradition ture understanding unity University Utopia values Williams's working-class writing Wuthering Heights