"This is a major practical and theoretical study of
how poems are written. Its focus is the heart of the creative process,
with detailed descriptions of real writers in real situations of
writing with real pens, ink, and paper—and then real editors,
printers, publishers, purchasers, readers, reviewers, and so on
in the further processes of the production of literary works. In
the general field of literary study, I cannot think of a more important
topic than how writers create their works. Sally Bushell does an
excellent job with this topic."—Jack Stillinger, Center
for Advanced Study Professor of English, Emeritus, at the University
of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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Text as Process:
Creative Composition in Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Dickinson
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| Sally Bushell |
| 320 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 21 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth 978-0-8139-2774-9 $55.00 |
| April 2009 |
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Text as Process is about the literary work before it
becomes a completed work of art. It is concerned with draft materials,
with the manuscripts that constitute text in a state of process.
What is text as process? And what should we, as readers, try to
do with it?
Bushell’s aim in Text as Process is to develop
a research method for the study of compositional material. Although
she draws on an international context—mainly French and
German traditions—for current approaches to textual criticism,
hers is the first book to apply a new form of critical analysis
to authors in the Anglo-American tradition.
Bushell revisits issues of intention within process and makes
this the center of her new approach, employing “case studies”
of the work of three major nineteenth-century poets: Wordsworth,
Tennyson, and Dickinson. She applies her methodology to each writer
in different ways, allowing for cross-comparison as well as the
recognition of individual distinctiveness in creativity. In doing
so, Bushell demonstrates the need for a unique hermeneutics in
relation to the making of the literary work of art. The author
concludes with a philosophical account of the status and meaning
of the literary work as it comes into being.
Sally Bushell is Senior Lecturer in the
Department of English and Creative Writing at Lancaster University
in England.
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