Wayne C. Booth
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 19 years ago |
Date of birth | February 22,1921 |
Zodiac sign | Pisces |
Born | American Fork |
Utah | |
United States | |
Date of died | October 10,2005 |
Died | Chicago |
Illinois | |
United States | |
Job | Literary critic |
Education | The University of Chicago |
Brigham Young University | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 492860 |
The rhetoric of fiction
The Craft of Research
The Rhetoric of Irony
The Company We Keep: An Ethics of Fiction
The vocation of a teacher
The Rhetoric of RHETORIC: The Quest for Effective Communication
The essential Wayne Booth
For the Love of It: Amateuring and Its Rivals
Modern dogma and the rhetoric of assent
Critical understanding
Now don't try to reason with me
The knowledge most worth having
My Many Selves
What Every Novelist Needs to Know about Narrators
The Harper & Row Reader: Liberal Education Through Reading And Writing
The Craft of Research, Fourth Edition
The Harper & Row rhetoric
The Art of Deliberalizing: A Handbook for True Professionals
Instructor's Manual to Accompany The Harper and Row Reader
The Craft of Research
The Rhetoric of Irony
The Company We Keep: An Ethics of Fiction
The vocation of a teacher
The Rhetoric of RHETORIC: The Quest for Effective Communication
The essential Wayne Booth
For the Love of It: Amateuring and Its Rivals
Modern dogma and the rhetoric of assent
Critical understanding
Now don't try to reason with me
The knowledge most worth having
My Many Selves
What Every Novelist Needs to Know about Narrators
The Harper & Row Reader: Liberal Education Through Reading And Writing
The Craft of Research, Fourth Edition
The Harper & Row rhetoric
The Art of Deliberalizing: A Handbook for True Professionals
Instructor's Manual to Accompany The Harper and Row Reader
Wayne C. Booth Life story
Wayne Clayson Booth was an American literary critic. He was the George M. Pullman Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in English Language & Literature and the College at the University of Chicago. His work followed largely from the Chicago school of literary criticism.