|
|
Kenneth Burke in the 1930s Ann George and Jack Selzer An invitation to mingle with Burke in the thirties and witness the development of his major works of the era 6 x 9, 344 pages, 2 illus. Studies in Rhetoric / Communication |
|
ABOUT THE BOOKKenneth Burke once remarked that he was "not a joiner of societies." Yet during the 1930s he affiliated himself with a range of intellectual communitiesincluding the leftists in the League of American Writers; the activist contributors to Partisan Review, the New Masses, the Nation, and the New Republic; and the southern Agrarians and New Critics, as well as various other poets and pragmatists and thinkers. Ann George and Jack Selzer underscore the importance of these relations to Burke's development and suggest that his major writing projects of the 1930s fundamentally emerged from interactions with members of these various groups, such as writers Robert Penn Warren, Katherine Anne Porter, Allen Tate, and John Crowe Ransom; poets Marianne Moore and William Carlos Williams; cutural commentators Malcolm Cowley, Mike Gold, and Edmund Wilson; and philosophers Sidney Hook and John Dewey. George and Selzer offer a comprehensive account of four Burke textsAuscultation, Creation, and Revision (1932), Permanence and Change (1935), Attitudes toward History (1937), and The Philosophy of Literary Form (1941)and contend that the work from this decade is at least as compelling as his later, more widely known books. The authors examine extensive and largely unexplored archives of Burke's papers, study the magazines in which Burke's works appeared, and, most important, read him carefully in relation to the ideological conversations of the time. Offering a rich context for understanding Burke's writings from one of his most prolific periods, George and Selzer argue that significant Burkean conceptssuch as identification and dramatismfound in later texts ought to be understood as rooted in his 1930s commitments. ABOUT THE AUTHORSPresident-elect of the Kenneth Burke Society, Ann George is an associate professor at Texas Christian University, where she teaches and writes about rhetorical theory and the culture wars of the 1930s. Author of Kenneth Burke in Greenwich Village: Conversing with the Moderns, 19151931, Jack Selzer has written and edited books and articles on Kenneth Burke, the rhetoric of science, and rhetorical theory. Among his other works are Rhetorical Bodies, 1977: The Cultural Moment in Composition, and Good Reasons. Selzer is a professor of English and an associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Pennsylvania State University. BOOK FLYERDownload the flyer/order form here. You will need Adobe Reader which is free from Adobe. |
This page updated May 4, 2007 by parkerll@sc.edu
This page copyright © 2007, The Board of Trustees of the University of South Carolina
URL: http://www.sc.edu/uscpress/2007/3700.html