1st Edition
The Theory and Practice of Reception Study Reading Race and Gender in Twain, Faulkner, Ellison, and Morrison
Introduction:
Ch. 1: Aesthetic Theory: From Adorno to Cultural History
Ch. 2: Reading in History and in Theory
Ch. 3: Mark Twain’s Detective Fiction: From The Stolen White Elephant and The Double-Barrelled Detective Story to The Adventures of Pudd’nHead Wilson.
Ch. 4: Faulkner’s Subversive Modernism: Light in August
Ch. 5: Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man: Modernism and Democracy in American Literature
Ch.6: Three Days Before the Shooting: Modernism and Democracy in/and American Literature
Ch.7: Toni Morrison’s Beloved: The Forgotten History of Slavery and Patriarchy
Ch. 8: Toni Morrison’s A Mercy: The Critique of Patriarchy and History’s Lost Opportunities
Conclusion
Biography
Philip Goldstein earned a B.A. in English from Columbia University and a Ph.D. in English from Temple University and was promoted to full professor at the University of Delaware in 2001. With James Machor, he edited Reception Study: From Literary Theory to Cultural Studies (Routledge 2001).






