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A Companion to Romantic Poetry


A Companion to Romantic Poetry


1. Aufl.

von: Charles Mahoney

34,99 €

Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 28.10.2010
ISBN/EAN: 9781444390636
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 640

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Beschreibungen

Through a series of 34 essays by leading and emerging scholars, <i>A Companion to Romantic Poetry</i> reveals the rich diversity of Romantic poetry and shows why it continues to hold such a vital and indispensable place in the history of English literature. <ul> <li>Breaking free from the boundaries of the traditionally-studied authors, the collection takes a revitalized approach to the field and brings together some of the most exciting work being done at the present time</li> <li>Emphasizes poetic form and technique rather than a biographical approach</li> <li>Features essays on production and distribution and the different schools and movements of Romantic Poetry</li> <li>Introduces contemporary contexts and perspectives, as well as the issues and debates that continue to drive scholarship in the field</li> <li>Presents the most comprehensive and compelling collection of essays on British Romantic poetry currently available</li> </ul>
<p><i>List of Illustrations viii</i></p> <p><i>Notes on Contributors ix</i></p> <p><i>Acknowledgments xiv</i></p> <p>Introduction 1<br /> <i>Charles Mahoney</i></p> <p><b>Part I Forms and Genres 7</b></p> <p>1 Mournful Ditties and Merry Measures: Feeling and Form in the Romantic Short Lyric and Song 9<br /> <i>Michael O’Neill</i></p> <p>2 Archaist-Innovators: The Couplet from Churchill to Browning 25<br /> <i>Simon Jarvis</i></p> <p>3 The Temptations of Tercets 44<br /> <i>Charles Mahoney</i></p> <p>4 To Scorn or To “Scorn not the Sonnet” 62<br /> <i>Daniel Robinson</i></p> <p>5 Ballad Collection and Lyric Collectives 78<br /> <i>Steve Newman</i></p> <p>6 Satire, Subjectivity, and Acknowledgment 95<br /> <i>William Flesch</i></p> <p>7 “Stirring shades”: The Romantic Ode and Its Afterlives 107<br /> <i>Esther Schor</i></p> <p>8 Pastures New and Old: The Romantic Afterlife of Pastoral Elegy 123<br /> <i>Christopher R. Miller</i></p> <p>9 The Romantic Georgic and the Work of Writing 140<br /> <i>Tim Burke</i></p> <p>10 Shepherding Culture and the Romantic Pastoral 159<br /> <i>John Bugg</i></p> <p>11 Ear and Eye: Counteracting Senses in Loco-descriptive Poetry 176<br /> <i>Adam Potkay</i></p> <p><b>Part II Production and Distribution, Schools and Movements 195</b></p> <p>12 “Other voices speak”: The Poetic Conversations of Byron and Shelley 197<br /> <i>Simon Bainbridge</i></p> <p>13 The Thrush in the Theater: Keats and Hazlitt at the Surrey Institution 217<br /> <i>Sarah M. Zimmerman</i></p> <p>14 Laboring-Class Poetry in the Romantic Era 234<br /> <i>Michael Scrivener</i></p> <p>15 Celtic Romantic Poetry: Scotland, Ireland, Wales 251<br /> <i>Jane Moore</i></p> <p>16 Anglo-Jewish Romantic Poetry 268<br /> <i>Karen Weisman</i></p> <p>17 Leigh Hunt’s Cockney Canon: Sociability and Subversion from Homer to Hyperion 285<br /> <i>Michael Tomko</i></p> <p>18 Poetry, Conversation, Community: Annus Mirabilis, 1797–1798 302<br /> <i>Emily Sun</i></p> <p><b>Part III Contemporary Contexts and Perspectives 319</b></p> <p>19 Spontaneity, Immediacy, and Improvisation in Romantic Poetry 321<br /> <i>Angela Esterhammer</i></p> <p>20 Celebrity, Gender, and the Death of the Poet: The Mystery of Letitia Elizabeth Landon 337<br /> <i>Ghislaine McDayter</i></p> <p>21 Poetry and Illustration: “Amicable strife” 354<br /> <i>Sophie Thomas</i></p> <p>22 Romanticism, Sport, and Late Georgian Poetry 374<br /> <i>John Strachan</i></p> <p>23 “The science of feelings”: Wordsworth’s Experimental Poetry 393<br /> <i>Ross Hamilton</i></p> <p>24 Romanticism, Gnosticism, and Neoplatonism 412<br /> <i>Laura Quinney</i></p> <p>25 Milton and the Romantics 425<br /> <i>Gordon Teskey</i></p> <p><b>Part IV Critical Issues and Current Debates 443</b></p> <p>26 “The feel of not to feel it,” or the Pleasures of Enduring Form 445<br /> <i>Anne-Lise François</i></p> <p>27 Romantic Poetry and Literary Theory: The Case of “A slumber did my spirit seal” 467<br /> <i>Marc Redfield</i></p> <p>28 “Strange utterance”: The (Un)Natural Language of the Sublime in Wordsworth’s Prelude 483<br /> <i>Timothy Bahti</i></p> <p>29 The Matter of Genre in the Romantic Sublime 503<br /> <i>Ian Balfour</i></p> <p>30 Sexual Politics and the Performance of Gender in Romantic Poetry 521<br /> <i>James Najarian</i></p> <p>31 Blake’s Jerusalem: Friendship with Albion 538<br /> <i>Karen Swann</i></p> <p>32 The World without Us: Romanticism, Environmentalism, and Imagining Nature 554<br /> <i>Bridget Keegan</i></p> <p>33 Ethical Supernaturalism: The Romanticism of Wordsworth, Heaney, and Lacan 572<br /> <i>Guinn Batten</i></p> <p>34 The Persistence of Romanticism 589<br /> <i>Willard Spiegelman</i></p> <p><i>Index 606</i></p>
<p>“It is hard to think of a more sensitive manipulation of the major feature that distinguishes these Blackwell anthologies from their direct rivals: the detailed annotations that accompany each author and text. … In O’Neill and Mahoney’s hands, the gloss is as much a prompt or a challenge, as it is a summary or exegesis. The hermeneutic impulse is checked, in favour of a form of attention that occurs more frequently in disciplines such as art history than in literary studies: the patient exposition of technical detail, generic make-up and social context, through which the expressive and the historical are taken to be inseparable…. The form of attention that O’Neill and Mahoney manifest is not only consistent, but also complementary. The former is particularly alert (as the example of Blake suggests) to metrical nuance and to strong ambiguity in a more general sense; the latter, meanwhile, shows a remarkable ear to the many echoes and allusions across and within texts.”  (<i>Coleridge Bulletin</i>, 1 June 2014)</p> "Comprising 625 pages and very nicely produced, it represents good value, and I believe that many of these thirty-four excellent essays will be consulted for years to come . . . It should interest a wide range of scholars and encourage them to find new ways of understanding, questioning, and celebrating its poetic legacy." (Review 19, 2011) <p>"With such a variety of content and depth of literary study, The Companion to Romantic Poetry should be of interest to general readers and students seeking an inspiring introduction to the poets of the romantic era, but also more informed scholars looking for a different perspective." (Reference Reviews, 2011)</p> <p>"This volume is an excellent resource for both undergraduate and postgraduate study, providing a refreshing take on many conventional areas of Romantic scholarship whilst also introducing a welcome number of new perspectives on this diverse and fascinating literary genre." (Routledge ABES, 2011)</p> <p>"Up to date and rich in foundations, this will be useful to students at any level. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers." (Choice, 1 July 2011)</p>
<b>Charles Mahoney</b> is Associate Professor of English at the University of Connecticut, USA. He is the author of <i>Romantics and Renegades: The Poetics of Political Reaction</i> (2003), the editor of <i>Leigh Hunt, Later Literary Essays</i> (2003), and co-editor, with Michael O'Neill, of <i>Romantic Poetry: An Annotated Anthology</i> (Wiley-Blackwell, 2008).
It has never been possible to adequately define either Romanticism or Romantic poetry. There are no uncontested dates with which to delimit the period historically; neither is there an essential set of qualities which makes a poem unequivocally Romantic. Beyond argument, however, is the critical role that Romantic poetry has played and continues to play in evaluations of the achievements of British poetry. <p>The elusive nature of the period has meant that, historically, the study of Romantic poetry has been organised around just six canonical figures -- Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats -- and structured in terms of the categories generated by their works alone. Today our sense of both the achievements and the possibilities of Romantic poetry is far more expansive. This collection of 34 provocative new essays attests to the remarkable diversity of the period and encourages us to take a different approach to this body of work by refocusing our attention on the revitalised matters of form, metre, and genre.</p>

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