In the second half of 20th century, the German thinker Wolfgang Iser developed a theory of reading literary texts that opened up new horizons in literary studies. By focusing on the reader instead of the writer, Iser introduced new ways of reading. He subsequently extended his literary studies, went beyond the conventional domains, and developed a novel area of research which he named “Literary Anthropology”. The present article is an attempt to draw an outline of Iser’s major notions
Barekat, B. (2014). Act of Reading and Literary Anthropology: An Outline of Wolfgang Iser’s Ideas. New Literary Studies, 47(1), 51-70. doi: 10.22067/jls.v47i1.30685
MLA
Behzad Barekat. "Act of Reading and Literary Anthropology: An Outline of Wolfgang Iser’s Ideas", New Literary Studies, 47, 1, 2014, 51-70. doi: 10.22067/jls.v47i1.30685
HARVARD
Barekat, B. (2014). 'Act of Reading and Literary Anthropology: An Outline of Wolfgang Iser’s Ideas', New Literary Studies, 47(1), pp. 51-70. doi: 10.22067/jls.v47i1.30685
VANCOUVER
Barekat, B. Act of Reading and Literary Anthropology: An Outline of Wolfgang Iser’s Ideas. New Literary Studies, 2014; 47(1): 51-70. doi: 10.22067/jls.v47i1.30685
Send comment about this article