Reading, writing and the influence of Harold Bloom

Editors:
Alan Rawes
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Jonathon Shears
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This book aims to bring into sharper relief what Harold Bloom, across a prolific publishing career over more than forty years, has helped us to see about the business of reading and writing. It is also interested in those other aspects of Bloom - the pedantry, conservatism, hysteria and silliness - that so many readers have found in his work. Perceptions of Bloom have been constantly shifting over the last four decades as a series of revolutions have swept through literary studies. In a moment of relative calm within the discipline, the author wants to reassess Bloom's consistently sustained agenda in the light of these revolutions, as well as taking a fresh look at Bloom's work from within a critical climate that, in some ways, might be increasingly congenial to him. Bloom is probably the most famous living literary critic in the world. The book focuses on what Bloom's understanding of historical continuity tells us about the fate of Wordsworth's tragic tale of revolutionary France, 'Vaudracour and Julia'. Feminist readings are not the only ones marginalised by Bloom's patriarchal directives - bibliographic readings, for example, are also overlooked. Andrew Stauffer illuminates this particular 'blind spot' in Bloom's theory in his discussion of the 'material existence' of one of Bloom's favourite poems - Browning's "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came". Julian Wolfreys takes The Anxiety of Influence as his text and attempts to unravel the thread of spectres woven into Bloom's fabric.

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