Romantic Poems, Poets, and NarratorsKent State University Press, 2000 - 203 pagina's Romantic Poems, Poets, and Narrators will be valuable to specialists not only in romantic period studies but in literary theory and poetics as well. Students of Blake, Coleridge, Wordsworth, and Keats will appreciate these refreshingly subtle, tactful, and convincing new readings of the major romantic poems. The book is a scholarly and engaging guide to the various and complex discourses--formalist, psychoanalytic, deconstructive, new historicist--that have provided the terms in which these poems have been and currently are received. |
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Pagina 2
... awareness of its impossibility thus coexist in necessary tension , within each in- dividual text's subjects - its author , its narrator , its characters , its readers . Each of these subjects is both stable and unstable , centered and ...
... awareness of its impossibility thus coexist in necessary tension , within each in- dividual text's subjects - its author , its narrator , its characters , its readers . Each of these subjects is both stable and unstable , centered and ...
Pagina 4
... awareness of paradox , is designed ( as are his poems , and their multiple textual forms ) to free us from systems . But we never free ourselves wholly , and only within systems is such a relative freedom possible . Coleridge's awareness ...
... awareness of paradox , is designed ( as are his poems , and their multiple textual forms ) to free us from systems . But we never free ourselves wholly , and only within systems is such a relative freedom possible . Coleridge's awareness ...
Pagina 9
... Brooks's reading of Marvell's " Horatian Ode . ” Arguing that " the tension between the speaker's admiration for the kingliness which has won Cromwell the power and his awareness that the power can be maintained only by a INTRODUCTION • 9.
... Brooks's reading of Marvell's " Horatian Ode . ” Arguing that " the tension between the speaker's admiration for the kingliness which has won Cromwell the power and his awareness that the power can be maintained only by a INTRODUCTION • 9.
Pagina 10
Joseph C. Sitterson. awareness that the power can be maintained only by a continual exertion of these talents for kingship - this tension is never relaxed , " Brooks emphasizes that this " total attitude " of the poem is " dramatic " -an ...
Joseph C. Sitterson. awareness that the power can be maintained only by a continual exertion of these talents for kingship - this tension is never relaxed , " Brooks emphasizes that this " total attitude " of the poem is " dramatic " -an ...
Pagina 16
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Inhoudsopgave
Introduction to the Songs of Experience The Infection of Time | 12 |
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Distinguishing the Certain from the Uncertain | 34 |
The Prelude Still Something to Pursue | 65 |
The Intimations Ode An Infinite Complexity | 88 |
Lamia Attitude Is Every Thing | 110 |
Conclusion | 137 |
Notes | 153 |
185 | |
199 | |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
aesthetic ambiguity Ancient Mariner Apollonius argues argument awareness Bailey Bard Bard's believe Blake Bloom characterizes claim coherence Coleridge Coleridge's complex consciousness context critical cultural Dacier deconstructive desire discourse dream eighteenth-century emphasis added ence episode example fantasy formalist genre gloss glossator historicism historicist human imagination implies intention interpretation Intimations Ode John Keats Keats Keats's Lacan Lamia language latent content least limits literary Lycius lyric Lyrical Ballads Mariner's experience mastery McGann meaning metaphoric mind moral narrative narrator narrator's nature Neoplatonic Oxford philosophical Platonic Platonic shades poem poem's poet's poetic poetry Prelude primary process problem prophetic psychic psychoanalytic Reader-Response Criticism readers reflect relation rhetoric Rime Romantic poets Romanticism seems self-consciousness sense Simplon Pass Songs of Experience speaker stanzas sublime suggests textual theory Tintern Abbey tion transcendent truth understanding vision Warren William Blake William Wordsworth words Wordsworth York