Byron and Byronism in America
Author: William Ellery Leonard
Publisher:
Published: 1905
Total Pages: 150
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: William Ellery Leonard
Publisher:
Published: 1905
Total Pages: 150
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Ellery Leonard
Publisher:
Published: 1905
Total Pages: 162
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: John W. M. Hallock
Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press
Published: 2000
Total Pages: 244
ISBN-13: 9780299168049
DOWNLOAD EBOOKHailed in the mid-19th century as the most important American poet of the period, Fitz-Greene Halleck was dubbed the American Byron and had a large general readership despite his work's infusion of homosexual themes. This biography portrays him as a prophet of the literary and sexual revolution.
Author: Peter Larsen Thorslev
Publisher:
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 228
ISBN-13: 9780758120007
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Edna O'Brien
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Published: 2010-06-14
Total Pages: 241
ISBN-13: 0393071278
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"How long it’s taken for these two mad, bad and dangerous writers to get together!" —Alan Cheuse, San Francisco Chronicle Acclaimed biographer of James Joyce, Edna O’Brien has written a "jaunty" (The New Yorker) biography that suits her fiery and charismatic subject. She follows Byron from the dissipations of Regency London to the wilds of Albania and the Socratic pleasures of Greece and Turkey, culminating in his meteoric rise to fame at the age of twenty-four. With "a novelist’s understanding of tempo and characterization" (Miami Herald), O’Brien captures the spirit of the man and creates an indelible portrait that explodes the Romantic myth. Byron, as brilliantly rendered by O’Brien, is the poet as rebel, imaginative and lawless, and defiantly immortal.
Author: Roderick Frazier Nash
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 2014-01-28
Total Pages: 440
ISBN-13: 0300153503
DOWNLOAD EBOOKDIVRoderick Nash’s classic study of changing attitudes toward wilderness during American history, as well as the origins of the environmental and conservation movements, has received wide acclaim since its initial publication in 1967. The Los Angeles Times listed it among the one hundred most influential books published in the last quarter century, Outside Magazine included it in a survey of “books that changed our world,” and it has been called the “Book of Genesis for environmentalists.” For the fifth edition, Nash has written a new preface and epilogue that brings Wilderness and the American Mind into dialogue with contemporary debates about wilderness. Char Miller’s foreword provides a twenty-first-century perspective on how the environmental movement has changed, including the ways in which contemporary scholars are reimagining the dynamic relationship between the natural world and the built environment./div
Author: Sarah Wootton
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2017-01-26
Total Pages: 262
ISBN-13: 113757934X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKByronic Heroes in Nineteenth-Century Women's Writing and Screen Adaptation charts a new chapter in the changing fortunes of a unique cultural phenomenon. This book examines the afterlives of the Byronic hero through the work of nineteenth-century women writers and screen adaptations of their fiction. It is a timely reassessment of Byron's enduring legacy during the nineteenth century and beyond, focusing on the charged and unstable literary dialogues between Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell, George Eliot and a Romantic icon whose presence takes centre stage in recent screen adaptations of their most celebrated novels. The broad interdisciplinary lens employed in this book concentrates on the conflicted rewritings of Byron's poetry, his 'heroic' protagonists, and the cult of Byronism in nineteenth-century novels from Pride and Prejudice to Middlemarch, and extends outwards to the reappearance of Byronic heroes on film and in television series over the last two decades.
Author: Peter Cochran
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Published: 2015-05-13
Total Pages: 550
ISBN-13: 1443877735
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe works of Lord Byron and his friend Sir Walter Scott had an influence on European literature which was immediate and profound. Peter Cochran’s book charts that influence on France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Poland and Russia, with individual chapters on Goethe, Pushkin, and Baudelaire – and one special chapter on Ibsen, who called Peer Gynt his Manfred. Cochran shows that, although Byron’s best work is his satirical writing, which is aimed in part at his earlier “romantic” material and its readership, his self-correction was not taken on board by many European writers (Pushkin being the exception), and it was the gloomy Byronic Heroes who held sway. These were often read as revolutionaries, but were in fact dead-end. It was a mythical, not a literary Byron whom people thought they had read. The book ends with chapters on three British writers who seem at last to have read Byron, in their different ways, accurately – Eliot, Joyce, and Yeats.
Author: Andrew Rutherford
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2013-04-15
Total Pages: 533
ISBN-13: 1135035229
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material themselves.