Louise Yelin Louise Yelin i(A8539 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 In Another Place : Postcolonial Perspectives on Reading Louise Yelin , 2004 single work criticism
— Appears in: Reading Sites : Social Difference and Reader Response 2004; (p. 83-107)
1 Representing the 1930s : Capitalism, Phallocracy, and the Politics of the Popular Front in 'House of All Nations' Louise Yelin , 2000 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Magic Phrase : Critical Essays on Christina Stead 2000; (p. 71-88, notes 268-272)
1 2 y separately published work icon From the Margins of Empire : Christina Stead, Doris Lessing, Nadine Gordimer Louise Yelin , Ithaca London : Cornell University Press , 1998 Z796041 1998 single work criticism
1 Christina Stead in 1991 Louise Yelin , 1992 single work criticism
— Appears in: World Literature Written in English , Spring vol. 32 no. 1 1992; (p. 52-54)
1 Fifty Years of Reading : A Reception Study of 'The Man Who Loved Children' Louise Yelin , 1990 single work criticism
— Appears in: Contemporary Literature , vol. 31 no. 4 1990; (p. 472-498)

'Christina Stead's The Man Who Loved Children poses a challenge to literary history as Jauss conceives it. The reception of the novel has a particularly rich history that spans fifty years and three distinct periods: 1940, when the novel was initially published; 1965, when it was reissued; and a period beginning in 1969 with the publication of the first book on Stead and continuing into the present. In all three periods, critics examine the novel with reference to "horizons of expectations" constituted by the "literary experience" they share (Jauss, "Literary History" 22; emphasis added). But critical discussions of The Man Who Loved Children in all three periods also involve evaluation  and specifically judgments about quality which, Barbara Herrnstein Smith argues (22), are legitimated by and in turn ratify the "evaluative authority" of particular critics and cultural institutions. These judgments and the evaluative communities whose authority they ratify are themselves inflected by material and ideological change. Whether we define the context of reception primarily in material and ideological terms, in aesthetic terms, or in terms of evaluative and interpretive communities (Fish) that mediate between the material and ideological, on the one hand, and the aesthetic, on the other, the "philological understanding" that Jauss regards as the goal of literary history lies just beyond a vanishing point determined by the particular horizons in (against) which the novel is examined. What emerges in place of the authoritative philological understanding that Jauss envisions are three distinct and distinctly relative versions of The Man Who Loved Children.'

Source: pp.472-473.
 

1 Sexual Politics and Female Heroism in the Novels of Christina Stead Louise Yelin , 1988 single work criticism
— Appears in: Faith of a (Woman) Writer 1988; (p. 191-198)
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