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  1. M.H. Abrams, Geoffrey Harpham. Cengage Learning, Jan 10, 2011 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 448 pages. First published fifty years ago, A GLOSSARY OF LITERARY TERMS remains an essential text for all serious students of literature. Now fully updated to reflect the latest scholarship on recent and rapidly evolving critical theories, the tenth ...

  2. M. H. Abrams. - 31 Mar 1977 -. Critical Inquiry. - Vol. 3, Iss: 3, pp 425-438. 54 Citations. TL;DR: The authors have been instructed these days to be wary of words like "origin," "center," and "end", but I will venture to say that this session had its origin in the dialogue between Wayne Booth and myself which centered on the rationale of the ...

  3. SOURCE: Abrams, M. H. “The Deconstructive Angel.” Critical Inquiry 3, no. 3 (spring 1977): 425-38. [In the following essay, which many critics consider the strongest and most influential ...

  4. He also is General Editor for THE NORTON ANTHOLOGY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE. In addition, M. H. Abrams has been the recipient of Guggenheim, Ford Foundation, and Rockefeller Postwar fellowships and the Award for Literature by the American Academy of Arts and Letters (1990). Geoffrey Galt Harpham is the director of the National Humanities Center.

  5. A glossary of literary terms. M. H. Abrams. Published 1941. Linguistics. The standard for over thirty years, A Glossary of Literary Terms, Seventh Edition, defines and discusses terms, critical theories, and points of view that are commonly applied to the classification, analysis, interpretation, and history of works of literature.

  6. In M.H. Abrams. With his second work, The Mirror and the Lamp: Romantic Theory and the Critical Tradition (1953), an expanded version of his Ph.D. dissertation, he joined the front rank of Romantic-literature scholars. The book’s title denotes the two metaphors by which Abrams characterized 18th- and 19th-century English literature ...

  7. M. H. Abrams, 1912 - 2015 Meyer Howard Abrams was born in Long Branch, New Jersey on July 23, 1912. He received a B.A. in English from Harvard University in 1934. He won a Henry fellowship to Cambridge University in 1935. He returned to Harvard University, where he received a Masters' degree in 1937 and a Ph. D. in 1940.