In:Communicational Criticism: Studies in literature as dialogue
Roger D. Sell
[Dialogue Studies 11] 2011
► pp. ix–xi
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Published online: 17 August 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.11.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ds.11.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: Communicational criticism
2. Henry V and the strength and weakness of words
3. Pope’s three modes of address
4. Wordsworth’s genuineness
5. Great Expectations and the Dickens community
6. The Waste Land and the discourse of mediation
7. Churchill’s My Early Life and communicational ethics
8. Orwell’s Coming up for Air and the communal negotiation of feelings
9. Lynne Reid Banks’s Melusine: A Mystery (1988): The ethics of writing for children
10. Communicational ethics and the plays of Harold Pinter
11. Afterword: Exploring literature’s new dialogue
References
Index
