Loving Literature: A Cultural History

Author:   Deidre Shauna Lynch (University of Toronto)
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226598390


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   01 November 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $49.95 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Loving Literature: A Cultural History


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Deidre Shauna Lynch (University of Toronto)
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 1.50cm , Height: 0.20cm , Length: 2.30cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9780226598390


ISBN 10:   022659839
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   01 November 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Where does the love of literature come from? And why is it so often unfairly maligned or absurdly idealized? In this fascinating account, Lynch delves into the history of literary appreciation and affection. Professional rigor, it turns out, is not so very far removed from amateur love; analysis and attachment are closely intertwined. At a moment when literary studies is reflecting anew on its defining purpose, this is a very timely and important book. --Rita Felski, University of Virginia An enthralling account of the complex relationship between reading and feeling. . . . By the end of Deidre Shauna Lynch's wonderful study, one is left less with a definitive sense of 'why' we love literature (let alone why we should or shouldn't) than with these long-lasting flashes of illumination. They are what make this book easy to love, like the best kind of literary history. --Times Literary Supplement Wonderfully engaging. . . . This book ranges widely over an astounding amount of material but without dropping the thread of its carefully plotted argument. At the same time, Lynch's terrific eye for the curious, humorous but revelatory detail--a zany, giveaway turn of phrase in an author's writing, say--is one source of this study's bookish pleasures: such enlivening details testify to the attentive, affectionate, but skeptical reading she models. --European Romantic Review Though Lynch's central thesis lends itself to ready summary, the course of her argument is nuanced, subtle, and richly textured by engagement with both recent scholarship and the material archive of the Romantic era. --College Literature To read Lynch. . .is to be among friends. These, however, are not simply historical anecdotes told to help some of us feel less alone in our idiosyncratic love of books and objects of art. Such tales can also be catalysts for discovering or rediscovering what it is like to feel passion for certain works of art and literature. --Common Knowledge A groundbreaking examination of literary affections. Coming at a moment when the field of literary studies is in crisis, in danger of losing its legitimacy, this account of our emotional commitment to books is especially important. . . . At every point, the author's own scholarly acumen and love of literature are clearly on display. She demonstrates, even as she reasons, that professional literary scholars can dispassionately and critically analyse the texts they love and intimately experience. --Times Higher Education A rich and lively cultural history. . . . Lynch contributes a welcome new affective dimension to now-familiar economic and sociological narratives of the emergence of 'Literature' as a distinct category of writing--of canon formation, cultural capital, marketplaces, and mass production. --Modern Language Quarterly Lynch, for example, is a beautiful writer whose style is elegant and satisfyingly dense; Loving Literature is a pleasure to read as a properly scholarly book in an age when the learned style is all too vulnerable to ridicule both inside and outside our professional circle. --American Literary History Readers' intimate, often perverse, relations with books are given magisterial treatment. . . . On the one hand, Loving Literature is on the leading edge of research into book history, antiquarianism, canon formation, and reading practice. On the other, it is also deeply situated in the study of affect, attachment, gender, sexuality, perversion, and mourning. . . . Puts forward a whole new set of concerns and a whole new cast of characters for telling the story of what we do. --SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 A wide-ranging study. . . . The book is strongest in its detailed examination of understudied figures . . . and its sensitivity to the social forces that shape reader responses. . . . Advanced scholars will benefit from Lynch's unknotting of intertwined public and private histories of earlier readers and scholars--a subject of relevance in the current climate, in which it seems increasingly untenable to make one's living by loving literature. Highly recommended. --Choice One welcome feature of Lynch's book is that it highlights the ways in which our feelings about literature can inform intellectual choices that are typically justified on epistemological grounds. --Chronicle of Higher Education Loving Literature is a fascinating cultural history. . . . The writing is forceful, witty, and often breezy in a way that suggests the author's tremendous mastery over and comfort with the material. The book is an important corrective to the many scholarly books in recent years that have ignored the importance of affect in the history of literary studies. --New Books on Literature 19 The book takes a quick first step, to the idea that perhaps reinstating an explicit, committed, but thoughtful love of literature would inspire those involved, and communicate the necessity of the subject better. Rather than pausing on this, however, it then moves on to its real issue: that loving literature is not, and has never been, a simple or unifying thing. The subsequent exploration, of the love of literature in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is consistently engaging and insightful. The indirect approach to criticism's modern predicament proves rewarding. --Cambridge Quarterly [Lynch's] investigation into the way late-18th- and early 19th-century readers felt and expressed their love of books is beautifully focused. . . . Like so many great arguments--Said's on Orientalism, Anderson's on the Nation, Butler's on Performativity--, Lynch's argument will be loved because it speaks both to and for us, of things we already knew but in terms that are historically astute. --Los Angeles Review of Books Loving Literature is a revelatory achievement, a major work that showcases cultural history at its very finest, combining high scholarship with democratic inclusiveness, infectious enthusiasm, and clarity of style. Lynch argues that the emergence of 'literature' in its modern sense in the Romantic period involved a structural transformation of the relation between work and reader, in which literature became the domain of a new affective intimacy at the core of private life. Written with verve and eloquence, Loving Literature is at every point alive, imaginatively attuned to its theme. Here is a critic whose own love of literature, far from softening her critical acumen, endows it with sympathetic force. --Ian Duncan, University of California, Berkeley A major work by a major scholar. This is truly an eagerly awaited book. Needless to say, Lynch writes not as some kind of skeptical outsider, but as a 'lover of literature' who seeks to understand why we professionally take all this so personally. The book will be much read and talked about across all fields of literary scholarship and beyond: a book about the love of literature is sure to attract the attention of a broad band of literature lovers both inside and outside the academy. --Adela Pinch, University of Michigan Loving Literature combines dry wit with polemical rigor. More fundamentally, the book enacts what it describes: Lynch's critical distance from the love of literature does not prevent her from conveying her own infectious engagement with the texts that she analyzes. One comes away feeling not that she has debunked the literary-critical enterprise, but that she has reinvigorated it. --Leah Price, Harvard University Reading Loving Literature, I couldn't help but see the romance that Lynch describes everywhere--from my local bookstore, where one can buy a tote bag with the likeness of Virginia Woolf or George Orwell, to the inevitable instances in which dead writers betray their present-day devotees. --Joshua Rothman New Yorker


Where does the love of literature come from? And why is it so often unfairly maligned or absurdly idealized? In this fascinating account, Lynch delves into the history of literary appreciation and affection. Professional rigor, it turns out, is not so very far removed from amateur love; analysis and attachment are closely intertwined. At a moment when literary studies is reflecting anew on its defining purpose, this is a very timely and important book. --Rita Felski, University of Virginia A groundbreaking examination of literary affections. Coming at a moment when the field of literary studies is in crisis, in danger of losing its legitimacy, this account of our emotional commitment to books is especially important. . . . At every point, the author's own scholarly acumen and love of literature are clearly on display. She demonstrates, even as she reasons, that professional literary scholars can dispassionately and critically analyse the texts they love and intimately experience. --Times Higher Education Wonderfully engaging. . . . This book ranges widely over an astounding amount of material but without dropping the thread of its carefully plotted argument. At the same time, Lynch's terrific eye for the curious, humorous but revelatory detail--a zany, giveaway turn of phrase in an author's writing, say--is one source of this study's bookish pleasures: such enlivening details testify to the attentive, affectionate, but skeptical reading she models. --European Romantic Review To read Lynch. . .is to be among friends. These, however, are not simply historical anecdotes told to help some of us feel less alone in our idiosyncratic love of books and objects of art. Such tales can also be catalysts for discovering or rediscovering what it is like to feel passion for certain works of art and literature. --Common Knowledge An enthralling account of the complex relationship between reading and feeling. . . . By the end of Deidre Shauna Lynch's wonderful study, one is left less with a definitive sense of 'why' we love literature (let alone why we should or shouldn't) than with these long-lasting flashes of illumination. They are what make this book easy to love, like the best kind of literary history. --Times Literary Supplement A rich and lively cultural history. . . . Lynch contributes a welcome new affective dimension to now-familiar economic and sociological narratives of the emergence of 'Literature' as a distinct category of writing--of canon formation, cultural capital, marketplaces, and mass production. --Modern Language Quarterly Though Lynch's central thesis lends itself to ready summary, the course of her argument is nuanced, subtle, and richly textured by engagement with both recent scholarship and the material archive of the Romantic era. --College Literature Loving Literature is a fascinating cultural history. . . . The writing is forceful, witty, and often breezy in a way that suggests the author's tremendous mastery over and comfort with the material. The book is an important corrective to the many scholarly books in recent years that have ignored the importance of affect in the history of literary studies. --New Books on Literature 19 Readers' intimate, often perverse, relations with books are given magisterial treatment. . . . On the one hand, Loving Literature is on the leading edge of research into book history, antiquarianism, canon formation, and reading practice. On the other, it is also deeply situated in the study of affect, attachment, gender, sexuality, perversion, and mourning. . . . Puts forward a whole new set of concerns and a whole new cast of characters for telling the story of what we do. --SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 A wide-ranging study. . . . The book is strongest in its detailed examination of understudied figures . . . and its sensitivity to the social forces that shape reader responses. . . . Advanced scholars will benefit from Lynch's unknotting of intertwined public and private histories of earlier readers and scholars--a subject of relevance in the current climate, in which it seems increasingly untenable to make one's living by loving literature. Highly recommended. --Choice [Lynch's] investigation into the way late-18th- and early 19th-century readers felt and expressed their love of books is beautifully focused. . . . Like so many great arguments--Said's on Orientalism, Anderson's on the Nation, Butler's on Performativity--, Lynch's argument will be loved because it speaks both to and for us, of things we already knew but in terms that are historically astute. --Los Angeles Review of Books Lynch, for example, is a beautiful writer whose style is elegant and satisfyingly dense; Loving Literature is a pleasure to read as a properly scholarly book in an age when the learned style is all too vulnerable to ridicule both inside and outside our professional circle. --American Literary History The book takes a quick first step, to the idea that perhaps reinstating an explicit, committed, but thoughtful love of literature would inspire those involved, and communicate the necessity of the subject better. Rather than pausing on this, however, it then moves on to its real issue: that loving literature is not, and has never been, a simple or unifying thing. The subsequent exploration, of the love of literature in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is consistently engaging and insightful. The indirect approach to criticism's modern predicament proves rewarding. --Cambridge Quarterly One welcome feature of Lynch's book is that it highlights the ways in which our feelings about literature can inform intellectual choices that are typically justified on epistemological grounds. --Chronicle of Higher Education Loving Literature is a revelatory achievement, a major work that showcases cultural history at its very finest, combining high scholarship with democratic inclusiveness, infectious enthusiasm, and clarity of style. Lynch argues that the emergence of 'literature' in its modern sense in the Romantic period involved a structural transformation of the relation between work and reader, in which literature became the domain of a new affective intimacy at the core of private life. Written with verve and eloquence, Loving Literature is at every point alive, imaginatively attuned to its theme. Here is a critic whose own love of literature, far from softening her critical acumen, endows it with sympathetic force. --Ian Duncan, University of California, Berkeley A major work by a major scholar. This is truly an eagerly awaited book. Needless to say, Lynch writes not as some kind of skeptical outsider, but as a 'lover of literature' who seeks to understand why we professionally take all this so personally. The book will be much read and talked about across all fields of literary scholarship and beyond: a book about the love of literature is sure to attract the attention of a broad band of literature lovers both inside and outside the academy. --Adela Pinch, University of Michigan Reading Loving Literature, I couldn't help but see the romance that Lynch describes everywhere--from my local bookstore, where one can buy a tote bag with the likeness of Virginia Woolf or George Orwell, to the inevitable instances in which dead writers betray their present-day devotees. --Joshua Rothman New Yorker Loving Literature combines dry wit with polemical rigor. More fundamentally, the book enacts what it describes: Lynch's critical distance from the love of literature does not prevent her from conveying her own infectious engagement with the texts that she analyzes. One comes away feeling not that she has debunked the literary-critical enterprise, but that she has reinvigorated it. --Leah Price, Harvard University


Where does the love of literature come from? And why is it so often unfairly maligned or absurdly idealized? In this fascinating account, Lynch delves into the history of literary appreciation and affection. Professional rigor, it turns out, is not so very far removed from amateur love; analysis and attachment are closely intertwined. At a moment when literary studies is reflecting anew on its defining purpose, this is a very timely and important book. --Rita Felski, University of Virginia A groundbreaking examination of literary affections. Coming at a moment when the field of literary studies is in crisis, in danger of losing its legitimacy, this account of our emotional commitment to books is especially important. . . . At every point, the author's own scholarly acumen and love of literature are clearly on display. She demonstrates, even as she reasons, that professional literary scholars can dispassionately and critically analyse the texts they love and intimately experience. --Times Higher Education An enthralling account of the complex relationship between reading and feeling. . . . By the end of Deidre Shauna Lynch's wonderful study, one is left less with a definitive sense of 'why' we love literature (let alone why we should or shouldn't) than with these long-lasting flashes of illumination. They are what make this book easy to love, like the best kind of literary history. --Times Literary Supplement Wonderfully engaging. . . . This book ranges widely over an astounding amount of material but without dropping the thread of its carefully plotted argument. At the same time, Lynch's terrific eye for the curious, humorous but revelatory detail--a zany, giveaway turn of phrase in an author's writing, say--is one source of this study's bookish pleasures: such enlivening details testify to the attentive, affectionate, but skeptical reading she models. --European Romantic Review Though Lynch's central thesis lends itself to ready summary, the course of her argument is nuanced, subtle, and richly textured by engagement with both recent scholarship and the material archive of the Romantic era. --College Literature To read Lynch. . .is to be among friends. These, however, are not simply historical anecdotes told to help some of us feel less alone in our idiosyncratic love of books and objects of art. Such tales can also be catalysts for discovering or rediscovering what it is like to feel passion for certain works of art and literature. --Common Knowledge A rich and lively cultural history. . . . Lynch contributes a welcome new affective dimension to now-familiar economic and sociological narratives of the emergence of 'Literature' as a distinct category of writing--of canon formation, cultural capital, marketplaces, and mass production. --Modern Language Quarterly Lynch, for example, is a beautiful writer whose style is elegant and satisfyingly dense; Loving Literature is a pleasure to read as a properly scholarly book in an age when the learned style is all too vulnerable to ridicule both inside and outside our professional circle. --American Literary History Loving Literature is a fascinating cultural history. . . . The writing is forceful, witty, and often breezy in a way that suggests the author's tremendous mastery over and comfort with the material. The book is an important corrective to the many scholarly books in recent years that have ignored the importance of affect in the history of literary studies. --New Books on Literature 19 The book takes a quick first step, to the idea that perhaps reinstating an explicit, committed, but thoughtful love of literature would inspire those involved, and communicate the necessity of the subject better. Rather than pausing on this, however, it then moves on to its real issue: that loving literature is not, and has never been, a simple or unifying thing. The subsequent exploration, of the love of literature in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is consistently engaging and insightful. The indirect approach to criticism's modern predicament proves rewarding. --Cambridge Quarterly One welcome feature of Lynch's book is that it highlights the ways in which our feelings about literature can inform intellectual choices that are typically justified on epistemological grounds. --Chronicle of Higher Education Readers' intimate, often perverse, relations with books are given magisterial treatment. . . . On the one hand, Loving Literature is on the leading edge of research into book history, antiquarianism, canon formation, and reading practice. On the other, it is also deeply situated in the study of affect, attachment, gender, sexuality, perversion, and mourning. . . . Puts forward a whole new set of concerns and a whole new cast of characters for telling the story of what we do. --SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 A wide-ranging study. . . . The book is strongest in its detailed examination of understudied figures . . . and its sensitivity to the social forces that shape reader responses. . . . Advanced scholars will benefit from Lynch's unknotting of intertwined public and private histories of earlier readers and scholars--a subject of relevance in the current climate, in which it seems increasingly untenable to make one's living by loving literature. Highly recommended. --Choice [Lynch's] investigation into the way late-18th- and early 19th-century readers felt and expressed their love of books is beautifully focused. . . . Like so many great arguments--Said's on Orientalism, Anderson's on the Nation, Butler's on Performativity--, Lynch's argument will be loved because it speaks both to and for us, of things we already knew but in terms that are historically astute. --Los Angeles Review of Books Loving Literature combines dry wit with polemical rigor. More fundamentally, the book enacts what it describes: Lynch's critical distance from the love of literature does not prevent her from conveying her own infectious engagement with the texts that she analyzes. One comes away feeling not that she has debunked the literary-critical enterprise, but that she has reinvigorated it. --Leah Price, Harvard University Loving Literature is a revelatory achievement, a major work that showcases cultural history at its very finest, combining high scholarship with democratic inclusiveness, infectious enthusiasm, and clarity of style. Lynch argues that the emergence of 'literature' in its modern sense in the Romantic period involved a structural transformation of the relation between work and reader, in which literature became the domain of a new affective intimacy at the core of private life. Written with verve and eloquence, Loving Literature is at every point alive, imaginatively attuned to its theme. Here is a critic whose own love of literature, far from softening her critical acumen, endows it with sympathetic force. --Ian Duncan, University of California, Berkeley A major work by a major scholar. This is truly an eagerly awaited book. Needless to say, Lynch writes not as some kind of skeptical outsider, but as a 'lover of literature' who seeks to understand why we professionally take all this so personally. The book will be much read and talked about across all fields of literary scholarship and beyond: a book about the love of literature is sure to attract the attention of a broad band of literature lovers both inside and outside the academy. --Adela Pinch, University of Michigan Reading Loving Literature, I couldn't help but see the romance that Lynch describes everywhere--from my local bookstore, where one can buy a tote bag with the likeness of Virginia Woolf or George Orwell, to the inevitable instances in which dead writers betray their present-day devotees. --Joshua Rothman New Yorker


Where does the love of literature come from? And why is it so often unfairly maligned or absurdly idealized? In this fascinating account, Lynch delves into the history of literary appreciation and affection. Professional rigor, it turns out, is not so very far removed from amateur love; analysis and attachment are closely intertwined. At a moment when literary studies is reflecting anew on its defining purpose, this is a very timely and important book. --Rita Felski, University of Virginia Loving Literature is a revelatory achievement, a major work that showcases cultural history at its very finest, combining high scholarship with democratic inclusiveness, infectious enthusiasm, and clarity of style. Lynch argues that the emergence of 'literature' in its modern sense in the Romantic period involved a structural transformation of the relation between work and reader, in which literature became the domain of a new affective intimacy at the core of private life. Written with verve and eloquence, Loving Literature is at every point alive, imaginatively attuned to its theme. Here is a critic whose own love of literature, far from softening her critical acumen, endows it with sympathetic force. --Ian Duncan, University of California, Berkeley A major work by a major scholar. This is truly an eagerly awaited book. Needless to say, Lynch writes not as some kind of skeptical outsider, but as a 'lover of literature' who seeks to understand why we professionally take all this so personally. The book will be much read and talked about across all fields of literary scholarship and beyond: a book about the love of literature is sure to attract the attention of a broad band of literature lovers both inside and outside the academy. --Adela Pinch, University of Michigan Loving Literature combines dry wit with polemical rigor. More fundamentally, the book enacts what it describes: Lynch's critical distance from the love of literature does not prevent her from conveying her own infectious engagement with the texts that she analyzes. One comes away feeling not that she has debunked the literary-critical enterprise, but that she has reinvigorated it. --Leah Price, Harvard University Reading Loving Literature, I couldn't help but see the romance that Lynch describes everywhere--from my local bookstore, where one can buy a tote bag with the likeness of Virginia Woolf or George Orwell, to the inevitable instances in which dead writers betray their present-day devotees. --Joshua Rothman New Yorker


Where does the love of literature come from? And why is it so often unfairly maligned or absurdly idealized? In this fascinating account, Lynch delves into the history of literary appreciation and affection. Professional rigor, it turns out, is not so very far removed from amateur love; analysis and attachment are closely intertwined. At a moment when literary studies is reflecting anew on its defining purpose, this is a very timely and important book. --Rita Felski, University of Virginia A groundbreaking examination of literary affections. Coming at a moment when the field of literary studies is in crisis, in danger of losing its legitimacy, this account of our emotional commitment to books is especially important. . . . At every point, the author's own scholarly acumen and love of literature are clearly on display. She demonstrates, even as she reasons, that professional literary scholars can dispassionately and critically analyse the texts they love and intimately experience. --Times Higher Education Wonderfully engaging. . . . This book ranges widely over an astounding amount of material but without dropping the thread of its carefully plotted argument. At the same time, Lynch's terrific eye for the curious, humorous but revelatory detail--a zany, giveaway turn of phrase in an author's writing, say--is one source of this study's bookish pleasures: such enlivening details testify to the attentive, affectionate, but skeptical reading she models. --European Romantic Review Though Lynch's central thesis lends itself to ready summary, the course of her argument is nuanced, subtle, and richly textured by engagement with both recent scholarship and the material archive of the Romantic era. --College Literature To read Lynch. . .is to be among friends. These, however, are not simply historical anecdotes told to help some of us feel less alone in our idiosyncratic love of books and objects of art. Such tales can also be catalysts for discovering or rediscovering what it is like to feel passion for certain works of art and literature. --Common Knowledge An enthralling account of the complex relationship between reading and feeling. . . . By the end of Deidre Shauna Lynch's wonderful study, one is left less with a definitive sense of 'why' we love literature (let alone why we should or shouldn't) than with these long-lasting flashes of illumination. They are what make this book easy to love, like the best kind of literary history. --Times Literary Supplement A rich and lively cultural history. . . . Lynch contributes a welcome new affective dimension to now-familiar economic and sociological narratives of the emergence of 'Literature' as a distinct category of writing--of canon formation, cultural capital, marketplaces, and mass production. --Modern Language Quarterly Lynch, for example, is a beautiful writer whose style is elegant and satisfyingly dense; Loving Literature is a pleasure to read as a properly scholarly book in an age when the learned style is all too vulnerable to ridicule both inside and outside our professional circle. --American Literary History Loving Literature is a fascinating cultural history. . . . The writing is forceful, witty, and often breezy in a way that suggests the author's tremendous mastery over and comfort with the material. The book is an important corrective to the many scholarly books in recent years that have ignored the importance of affect in the history of literary studies. --New Books on Literature 19 The book takes a quick first step, to the idea that perhaps reinstating an explicit, committed, but thoughtful love of literature would inspire those involved, and communicate the necessity of the subject better. Rather than pausing on this, however, it then moves on to its real issue: that loving literature is not, and has never been, a simple or unifying thing. The subsequent exploration, of the love of literature in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is consistently engaging and insightful. The indirect approach to criticism's modern predicament proves rewarding. --Cambridge Quarterly [Lynch's] investigation into the way late-18th- and early 19th-century readers felt and expressed their love of books is beautifully focused. . . . Like so many great arguments--Said's on Orientalism, Anderson's on the Nation, Butler's on Performativity--, Lynch's argument will be loved because it speaks both to and for us, of things we already knew but in terms that are historically astute. --Los Angeles Review of Books Readers' intimate, often perverse, relations with books are given magisterial treatment. . . . On the one hand, Loving Literature is on the leading edge of research into book history, antiquarianism, canon formation, and reading practice. On the other, it is also deeply situated in the study of affect, attachment, gender, sexuality, perversion, and mourning. . . . Puts forward a whole new set of concerns and a whole new cast of characters for telling the story of what we do. --SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 A wide-ranging study. . . . The book is strongest in its detailed examination of understudied figures . . . and its sensitivity to the social forces that shape reader responses. . . . Advanced scholars will benefit from Lynch's unknotting of intertwined public and private histories of earlier readers and scholars--a subject of relevance in the current climate, in which it seems increasingly untenable to make one's living by loving literature. Highly recommended. --Choice One welcome feature of Lynch's book is that it highlights the ways in which our feelings about literature can inform intellectual choices that are typically justified on epistemological grounds. --Chronicle of Higher Education Loving Literature is a revelatory achievement, a major work that showcases cultural history at its very finest, combining high scholarship with democratic inclusiveness, infectious enthusiasm, and clarity of style. Lynch argues that the emergence of 'literature' in its modern sense in the Romantic period involved a structural transformation of the relation between work and reader, in which literature became the domain of a new affective intimacy at the core of private life. Written with verve and eloquence, Loving Literature is at every point alive, imaginatively attuned to its theme. Here is a critic whose own love of literature, far from softening her critical acumen, endows it with sympathetic force. --Ian Duncan, University of California, Berkeley A major work by a major scholar. This is truly an eagerly awaited book. Needless to say, Lynch writes not as some kind of skeptical outsider, but as a 'lover of literature' who seeks to understand why we professionally take all this so personally. The book will be much read and talked about across all fields of literary scholarship and beyond: a book about the love of literature is sure to attract the attention of a broad band of literature lovers both inside and outside the academy. --Adela Pinch, University of Michigan Loving Literature combines dry wit with polemical rigor. More fundamentally, the book enacts what it describes: Lynch's critical distance from the love of literature does not prevent her from conveying her own infectious engagement with the texts that she analyzes. One comes away feeling not that she has debunked the literary-critical enterprise, but that she has reinvigorated it. --Leah Price, Harvard University Reading Loving Literature, I couldn't help but see the romance that Lynch describes everywhere--from my local bookstore, where one can buy a tote bag with the likeness of Virginia Woolf or George Orwell, to the inevitable instances in which dead writers betray their present-day devotees. --Joshua Rothman New Yorker


Where does the love of literature come from? And why is it so often unfairly maligned or absurdly idealized? In this fascinating account, Lynch delves into the history of literary appreciation and affection. Professional rigor, it turns out, is not so very far removed from amateur love; analysis and attachment are closely intertwined. At a moment when literary studies is reflecting anew on its defining purpose, this is a very timely and important book. --Rita Felski, University of Virginia An enthralling account of the complex relationship between reading and feeling. . . . By the end of Deidre Shauna Lynch's wonderful study, one is left less with a definitive sense of 'why' we love literature (let alone why we should or shouldn't) than with these long-lasting flashes of illumination. They are what make this book easy to love, like the best kind of literary history. --Times Literary Supplement Though Lynch's central thesis lends itself to ready summary, the course of her argument is nuanced, subtle, and richly textured by engagement with both recent scholarship and the material archive of the Romantic era. --College Literature To read Lynch. . .is to be among friends. These, however, are not simply historical anecdotes told to help some of us feel less alone in our idiosyncratic love of books and objects of art. Such tales can also be catalysts for discovering or rediscovering what it is like to feel passion for certain works of art and literature. --Common Knowledge A groundbreaking examination of literary affections. Coming at a moment when the field of literary studies is in crisis, in danger of losing its legitimacy, this account of our emotional commitment to books is especially important. . . . At every point, the author's own scholarly acumen and love of literature are clearly on display. She demonstrates, even as she reasons, that professional literary scholars can dispassionately and critically analyse the texts they love and intimately experience. --Times Higher Education Wonderfully engaging. . . . This book ranges widely over an astounding amount of material but without dropping the thread of its carefully plotted argument. At the same time, Lynch's terrific eye for the curious, humorous but revelatory detail--a zany, giveaway turn of phrase in an author's writing, say--is one source of this study's bookish pleasures: such enlivening details testify to the attentive, affectionate, but skeptical reading she models. --European Romantic Review A rich and lively cultural history. . . . Lynch contributes a welcome new affective dimension to now-familiar economic and sociological narratives of the emergence of 'Literature' as a distinct category of writing--of canon formation, cultural capital, marketplaces, and mass production. --Modern Language Quarterly Lynch, for example, is a beautiful writer whose style is elegant and satisfyingly dense; Loving Literature is a pleasure to read as a properly scholarly book in an age when the learned style is all too vulnerable to ridicule both inside and outside our professional circle. --American Literary History Readers' intimate, often perverse, relations with books are given magisterial treatment. . . . On the one hand, Loving Literature is on the leading edge of research into book history, antiquarianism, canon formation, and reading practice. On the other, it is also deeply situated in the study of affect, attachment, gender, sexuality, perversion, and mourning. . . . Puts forward a whole new set of concerns and a whole new cast of characters for telling the story of what we do. --SEL Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 A wide-ranging study. . . . The book is strongest in its detailed examination of understudied figures . . . and its sensitivity to the social forces that shape reader responses. . . . Advanced scholars will benefit from Lynch's unknotting of intertwined public and private histories of earlier readers and scholars--a subject of relevance in the current climate, in which it seems increasingly untenable to make one's living by loving literature. Highly recommended. --Choice One welcome feature of Lynch's book is that it highlights the ways in which our feelings about literature can inform intellectual choices that are typically justified on epistemological grounds. --Chronicle of Higher Education Loving Literature is a fascinating cultural history. . . . The writing is forceful, witty, and often breezy in a way that suggests the author's tremendous mastery over and comfort with the material. The book is an important corrective to the many scholarly books in recent years that have ignored the importance of affect in the history of literary studies. --New Books on Literature 19 The book takes a quick first step, to the idea that perhaps reinstating an explicit, committed, but thoughtful love of literature would inspire those involved, and communicate the necessity of the subject better. Rather than pausing on this, however, it then moves on to its real issue: that loving literature is not, and has never been, a simple or unifying thing. The subsequent exploration, of the love of literature in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is consistently engaging and insightful. The indirect approach to criticism's modern predicament proves rewarding. --Cambridge Quarterly [Lynch's] investigation into the way late-18th- and early 19th-century readers felt and expressed their love of books is beautifully focused. . . . Like so many great arguments--Said's on Orientalism, Anderson's on the Nation, Butler's on Performativity--, Lynch's argument will be loved because it speaks both to and for us, of things we already knew but in terms that are historically astute. --Los Angeles Review of Books Loving Literature is a revelatory achievement, a major work that showcases cultural history at its very finest, combining high scholarship with democratic inclusiveness, infectious enthusiasm, and clarity of style. Lynch argues that the emergence of 'literature' in its modern sense in the Romantic period involved a structural transformation of the relation between work and reader, in which literature became the domain of a new affective intimacy at the core of private life. Written with verve and eloquence, Loving Literature is at every point alive, imaginatively attuned to its theme. Here is a critic whose own love of literature, far from softening her critical acumen, endows it with sympathetic force. --Ian Duncan, University of California, Berkeley A major work by a major scholar. This is truly an eagerly awaited book. Needless to say, Lynch writes not as some kind of skeptical outsider, but as a 'lover of literature' who seeks to understand why we professionally take all this so personally. The book will be much read and talked about across all fields of literary scholarship and beyond: a book about the love of literature is sure to attract the attention of a broad band of literature lovers both inside and outside the academy. --Adela Pinch, University of Michigan Loving Literature combines dry wit with polemical rigor. More fundamentally, the book enacts what it describes: Lynch's critical distance from the love of literature does not prevent her from conveying her own infectious engagement with the texts that she analyzes. One comes away feeling not that she has debunked the literary-critical enterprise, but that she has reinvigorated it. --Leah Price, Harvard University Reading Loving Literature, I couldn't help but see the romance that Lynch describes everywhere--from my local bookstore, where one can buy a tote bag with the likeness of Virginia Woolf or George Orwell, to the inevitable instances in which dead writers betray their present-day devotees. --Joshua Rothman New Yorker


Author Information

Deidre Shauna Lynch is professor of English at Harvard University and the Chancellor Jackman Professor of English at the University of Toronto. She is the author of The Economy of Character: Novels, Market Culture, and the Business of Inner Meaning, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

wl

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List