The Short Oxford History of English LiteratureClarendon Press, 1996 - 718 pagina's Poet's Corner in Westminster Abbey (honoring such literary greats as Geoffrey Chaucer, Ben Jonson, John Dryden, and Charles Dickens) mirrors the conscious efforts of writers to create the British literary tradition--the physical expression of the emerging canon. In The Short Oxford History of English Literature, Revised Edition, Andrew Sanders conducts us on a tour through the living past behind the stone effigies of Poet's Corner, capturing the vast history of the literature of the British isles in a single, fascinating narrative. Starting with the early Anglo-Saxon period, he ranges up to the present, with individual chapters on Old and Middle English literature, the Renaissance, Shakespeare, the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Romantics, Victorian and Edwardian literature, modernism, and post-war writing. Throughout, Sanders combines concise analyses of individual works and authors with an overarching sense of how they interacted in a single literary tradition. Focusing on the dramas of Shakespeare, for example, he reminds us of the "symbiotic relationship" between the Bard and his rivals, especially Marlowe. He goes on the examine the impact of Scottish writers and philosophers, the rich traditions of Irish literature, and the works of Welsh authors. And he brings his analysis up to the post-modern present, looking at such writers as Seamus Heaney and Angela Carter, as well as examining the impact on literature of contemporary political, social, and economic developments. This revised edition includes for the first time detailed, chapter-by-chapter guidance on further reading. The literature of Britain stands as an inspiration to literary traditions in America and elsewhere. The Short Oxford History of English Literature provides a remarkably concise account of this rich past, offering food for thought and an even deeper enjoyment of the great works. |
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Pagina 11
... D. H. Lawrence and Eliot , and not in that of Joyce or Woolf , so , reading back from Lawrence and Eliot , a new tradition was established , one that included Donne and Bunyan while excluding Spenser and Milton , one that added James ...
... D. H. Lawrence and Eliot , and not in that of Joyce or Woolf , so , reading back from Lawrence and Eliot , a new tradition was established , one that included Donne and Bunyan while excluding Spenser and Milton , one that added James ...
Pagina 465
... D. H. Lawrence , for one , found her ' the production of the long selection by man of the woman in whom the female is subordinated and who therefore only seems to exist to be betrayed by their men ' . Lawrence's animus appears to have ...
... D. H. Lawrence , for one , found her ' the production of the long selection by man of the woman in whom the female is subordinated and who therefore only seems to exist to be betrayed by their men ' . Lawrence's animus appears to have ...
Pagina 523
... D. H. Lawrence wrote in 1916 , ' is a stark directness without a shadow of a lie , or a shadow of deflection anywhere . ' Such ' stark , bare , rocky directness of statement ' , Lawrence believed , constituted the only true poetic ...
... D. H. Lawrence wrote in 1916 , ' is a stark directness without a shadow of a lie , or a shadow of deflection anywhere . ' Such ' stark , bare , rocky directness of statement ' , Lawrence believed , constituted the only true poetic ...
Inhoudsopgave
Poets Corners The Development of a Canon of English Literature | 1 |
Old English Literature | 16 |
Medieval Literature 10661510 | 28 |
Copyright | |
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amongst Anglican attempts audience Britain British career celebrated century characters Charles Charlotte Brontë Chaucer Christian Church comedy contemporary court critical culture D. H. Lawrence death Despite Dickens distinct divine drama E. M. Forster early edition Eliot England English essays evident experience exploration expression fiction French George Eliot Henry hero human idea imagination insists intellectual Ireland John King language later Latin literary literature London lovers lyric marriage Milton modern moral narrative narrator nature notably novel novelist observed opening Oxford passion play poem poet poetic poetry political popular prose Protestant published Queen radical readers recognized religious Revolution Roman royal satire Scotland seems sense sexual Shakespeare shaped social society sonnet spiritual story style suggest T. S. Eliot theatre Thomas tion tradition tragedy translation Troilus and Criseyde verse Victorian volume W. B. Yeats W. H. Auden William women writers written
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The King's Two Maps: Cartography and Culture in Thirteenth-Century England Daniel Birkholz Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2003 |