A Linguistic History of English PoetryRoutledge, 25 jul 2005 - 240 pagina's This introductory book takes the reader through literary history from the Renaissance to Postmodernism, and considers individual texts as paradigms which can both reflect and unsettle their broader linguistic and cultural contexts. Richard Bradford provides detailed readings of individual texts which emphasize their relation to literary history and broader socio-cultural contexts, and which take into account developments in structuralism and postmodernism. Texts include poems by Donne, Herbert, Marvell, Milton, Pope, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Blake, Keats, Hopkins, Browning, Pound, Eliot, Carlos Williams, Auden, Larkin and Geoffrey Hill. |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 44
Pagina
... metre—which does not in itself create meaning—can influence meaning? Even if we could make such aclaim, it would bringusupagainst even more troubling questions aboutthe form ofpoetry that has effectively dominated twentiethcentury ...
... metre—which does not in itself create meaning—can influence meaning? Even if we could make such aclaim, it would bringusupagainst even more troubling questions aboutthe form ofpoetry that has effectively dominated twentiethcentury ...
Pagina
... metre can influence, perhaps even create, meaning. It would beuseful to specifytheterminology and thelimitations of our enquiry. Linguistics canprovide us with thetoolsand the methodology to analyse syntactic structures, semantics and ...
... metre can influence, perhaps even create, meaning. It would beuseful to specifytheterminology and thelimitations of our enquiry. Linguistics canprovide us with thetoolsand the methodology to analyse syntactic structures, semantics and ...
Pagina
... metre formulawillbefoundinthecouplet, the smallest and simplest example ofthestanza. Rhyme isimportant in regular verse becauseit allows poetsto vary the length and metrical structure oftheirlines while maintaining their distinct ...
... metre formulawillbefoundinthecouplet, the smallest and simplest example ofthestanza. Rhyme isimportant in regular verse becauseit allows poetsto vary the length and metrical structure oftheirlines while maintaining their distinct ...
Pagina
... metre,rhyme andlineation, we areimposing even more limitationsupon the identityand individuality ofthe subject represented within or speaking through poetic language. So when we praise poetic discourse for allowing us to represent ...
... metre,rhyme andlineation, we areimposing even more limitationsupon the identityand individuality ofthe subject represented within or speaking through poetic language. So when we praise poetic discourse for allowing us to represent ...
Pagina
... metre we would assume that they had taken a day off from their more serious philosophic conjectures. Why? There are several interrelated responses to this. Wecould claim that if Wordsworth's single objective was to communicatehis model ...
... metre we would assume that they had taken a day off from their more serious philosophic conjectures. Why? There are several interrelated responses to this. Wecould claim that if Wordsworth's single objective was to communicatehis model ...
Inhoudsopgave
Gedeelte 6 | |
Gedeelte 7 | |
Gedeelte 8 | |
Gedeelte 11 | |
Gedeelte 12 | |
Gedeelte 13 | |
Gedeelte 14 | |
Gedeelte 15 | |
Gedeelte 16 | |
Gedeelte 17 | |
Gedeelte 18 | |
Gedeelte 9 | |
Gedeelte 10 | |
Gedeelte 19 | |
Gedeelte 20 | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract andits andthe Augustan ballad betweenthe blank verse broader bythe century Chapter circumstances cognitive cohesion Coleridge’s complex condition Consider context conventional correspondences counterpart couplet criticism cultural deictic dimensions Donne Donne’s double pattern effect eighteenthcentury elements Eliot enclosed experience Flea foregrounding formal formula free verse fromthe grammatical heroic couplet iambic iambic pentameter images interpretive inthe intrinsic isthe Jakobson langue linguistic literary meaning metaphor metasyntax metonymic metre metrical metrists Milton modernist naturalisation nondramatic nonpoetic discourse ofthe ofthe double ofthetext onthe Paradise Lost pentameter poem poem’s poet poetic function poetic language poetry prelinguistic prose reader references referential function relation relationbetween relationship rhyme scheme Romantic semantic sentence sequence shift signifying sonnet sound pattern speaker speaking presence speech act stanza structure stylistic syllable syntactic syntagm syntagmatic syntax tension textual thatthe thedouble pattern thepoetic thetext thetwo tothe uncertain uponthe utterance verb verb phrase verse paragraph visual withthe Wordsworth