What does university study of English Literature involve today? How should students read literary texts? Answers to these questions have substantially changed and developed over recent decades,
often in response to advances in literary theory.
In the light of this and other recent developments, The Edinburgh Introduction provides a new, updated guide for students beginning their study of literature today. Recent developments in
theory are explained throughout, but they are not the only focus of attention. Instead, the emphasis is on clear, pragmatic explanation of critical practices, and of literary forms, styles and
techniques. These explanations are carefully illustrated through examples taken from readily-available works - usually ones included in the Norton or other major anthologies. Each chapter is
written by an experienced academic and teacher from Edinburgh University's Department of English Literature, recently reaffirmed as one of the best in the United Kingdom.
The result is an unbeatable resource for new students: a well-stocked toolbox, offering foundational introductions to ways literary texts can be approached, and to the critical, formal and
historical understanding this requires. New students will find essential insights on every page, guiding their understanding for years to come and thoroughly opening up for them all the
imaginative promise of literary study
All editors and contributors are current or recent members of the Department of English Literature in the University of Edinburgh.