Coleridge and the Armoury of the Human Mind: Essays on his Prose WritingsPeter J. Kitson, Thomas N. Corns Routledge, 17 jun 2016 - 140 pagina's First published in 1991, this book collects a broad array of path-finding scholarship by specialists in Coleridge and Romantic literature on the subject of his prose. They range from broad appraisals of Coleridge’s own critical practises; demonstrations of the fecundity of his autobiography, the Biographia Literaria, for contemporaries; the effect of Milton and the radical polemicists of the English Civil War on Coleridge’s early political and religious dissent; and the influence of the Hebrew prophetic tradition in his move away from the conjectural millenarianism of his youth towards the interpretation of Prophecy and a symbolic narrative. |
Inhoudsopgave
Coleridges Notebook Scribblings | |
The Ideology | |
Coleridge Kabbalah and the Book of Daniel | |
De Quinceys | |
Autobiography Idealism | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Coleridge and the Armoury of the Human Mind: Essays on his Prose Writings Peter J. Kitson,Thomas N. Corns Gedeeltelijke weergave - 2016 |
Coleridge and the Armoury of the Human Mind: Essays on His Prose Writings Peter J. Kitson,Thomas N. Corns Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2016 |
Coleridge and the Armoury of the Human Mind: Essays on His Prose Writings Peter J. Kitson,Thomas N. Corns Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2017 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
addiction appears argument autobiography believed Bills Biographia Literaria Brunonian Burgh chapter Charles Coleridge’s Commonwealthsman Confessions consciousness constitution contemporary creative criticism Daniel discourse divine eighteenthcentury Elia to Robert English essay feeling God’s Hazlitt historical human hypotyposis I.A. Richards ideas imagination interpretation jeremiad John Beer John Thelwall Kabbalah kabbalistic Kitson knowing Lamb Lamb’s language lectures literally literary London Lord Messiah metadiscourse metaphor millenarian Milton mind moral narrative nature nervous Norman Yoke notebook opium opiumeater Parliament passage philosophical Pitt’s Plot Discovered poem poet poetic poetry political principles prophecy prophetic prose published Quincey Quincey’s radical reader reading reform religious Revolution rhetorical Robert Southey Romantic Rump Parliament S.T. Coleridge Samuel Taylor Coleridge Scripture self selfconsciousness sense sephiroth Southey’s spirit strategy style symbolic theory thinking Thomas Thomas De Quincey thought tradition Treason truth Unitarian unity vols words Wordsworth WPrW writing