Byron and the Forms of Thought

Byron and the Forms of Thought

Author: Tony Howe

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 205

ISBN-13: 1846319714

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Much has been written recently on Byron as a philosopher, but Byron and the Forms of Thought is the first to thoroughly consider Byron's philosophical projects via his poetry. Anthony Howe explores Byron's poetry as a project with its own philosophical agency, arguing that readers and thinkers cannot understand Byron's intellectual force without an acute awareness of his poetic trajectory and, as such, without close critical readings of his poems. Howe revaluates many of Byron's core qualities, including his skepticism and the problems he encountered as a literary critic, closing with a provocative rereading of his epic poem Don Juan—not as satire, but as a new realization of visionary poetics. A must-read for any fan of Byron, this book is also a remarkable example of how to navigate the intersections between poetry and philosophy.


Byron and the Forms of Thought

Byron and the Forms of Thought

Author: Anthony Howe

Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Published: 2013-09-20

Total Pages: 205

ISBN-13: 1781385556

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

An Open Access edition of this book is available on the Liverpool University Press website and the OAPEN library. Byron and the Forms of Thought is a major new study of Byron as a poet and thinker. While informed by recent work on Byron’s philosophical contexts, the book questions attempts to describe Byron as a philosopher of a particular kind. It approaches Byron, rather, as a writer fascinated by the different ways of thinking philosophy and poetry are taken to represent. After an Introduction that explores Byron’s reception as a thinker, the book moves to a new reading of Byron’s scepticism, arguing for a close proximity, in Byron’s thought, between epistemology and poetics. This is explored through readings of Byron’s efforts both as a philosophical poet and writer of critical prose. The conclusions reached form the basis of an extended reading of Don Juan as a critical narrative that investigates connections between visionary and political consciousness. What emerges is a deeply thoughtful poet intrigued and exercised by the possibilities of literary form.


Byron, Poetics and History

Byron, Poetics and History

Author: Jane Stabler

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2002-12-05

Total Pages: 271

ISBN-13: 1139434357

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Jane Stabler offers the first full-scale examination of Byron's poetic form in relation to historical debates of his time. Responding to recent studies of publishing and audiences in the Romantic period, Stabler argues that Byron's poetics developed in response to contemporary cultural history and his reception by the English reading public. Drawing on extensive new archive research into Byron's correspondence and reading, Stabler traces the complexity of the intertextual dialogues that run through his work. For example, Stabler analyses Don Juan alongside Galignani's Messenger - Byron's principal source of news about British politics while in Italy - and refers to hitherto unpublished letters between Byron's publishers and his friends to reveal a powerful impulse among his contemporaries to direct his controversial poetic style to their own conflicting political ends. This fascinating study will be of interest to Byronists and, more broadly, to scholars of Romanticism in general.


Dryden and Pope in the Early 19th Century

Dryden and Pope in the Early 19th Century

Author: Amarsinghe

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 262

ISBN-13: 0521040264

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This neatly conducted argument, examining the phenomenon of 'romanticism', is a model survey of how changes in literary taste are brought about.


Literate Culture

Literate Culture

Author: Ruben Quintero

Publisher: University of Delaware Press

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 200

ISBN-13: 9780874134339

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Rhetorical strategies explored in some detail are Pope's use of generic expectations in either traditional "poetic kinds" or in his own metamorphosed versions; underlying structures of argument patterned after classical oratorical models; his methods of appeal through rational argument, character, or emotion; his reliance on personae; and his variations of expressive "transparency" and "opacity" correlating with classical views of formalistic refinement and poetic distance--of "light" and "shadow." The Dunciad Variorum (1729) roughly divides Pope's poetical career. In 1729 Pope began his serious planning for an opus magnum, which later became his Moral Essays and An Essay on Man, and shortly thereafter he turned his attention to the composition of his Horatian satires. It appears that the satirical muse of his Moral Essays prepared him for the crucial inspiration of his friend Lord Bolingbroke around 1733.