Byronic Exile
Author: Mark Loren Phillipson
Publisher:
Published: 1998
Total Pages: 456
ISBN-13:
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Author: Mark Loren Phillipson
Publisher:
Published: 1998
Total Pages: 456
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: D. Michael Jones
Publisher: McFarland
Published: 2017-02-19
Total Pages: 192
ISBN-13: 1476627452
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFrom action movies to video games to sports culture, modern masculinity is intrinsically associated with violent competition. This legacy has its roots in the 19th-century Romantic figure of the Byronic hero--the ideal Victorian male: devoted husband, sexual revolutionary and weaponized servant of the state. His silhouette can be traced through the works of authors like Lord Byron, Jane Austen, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Rudyard Kipling and Oscar Wilde. More than a literary genealogy, this history of the Byronic hero and his heirs follows the changes that masculinity has undergone in response to industrial upheaval, the rise of the middle class and the demands of global competition, from the Victorian period through the early 20th century.
Author: Jane Stabler
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 2013-10
Total Pages: 293
ISBN-13: 0199590249
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Artistry of Exile is a new study of one of the most important myths of nineteenth-century literature. Romantic poetry abounds with allusions to the loss of Eden and the isolation of figures who are 'sick for home'. This book explores the way such thematic preoccupations are modified by the material reality of enforced travel away from home.
Author: Frauke Reitemeier
Publisher: Universitätsverlag Göttingen
Published: 2012
Total Pages: 356
ISBN-13: 386395033X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Alan Rawes
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2017-03-02
Total Pages: 158
ISBN-13: 1351953893
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn this study, the author examines the evolution of Byron's poetry from Childe Harold I and II through to the composition of Beppo. Beginning with a close reading of the sustained poetic experimentation that constitutes Childe Harold I and II, he charts the progress of that experimentation in the Tales where Byron's poetry gets entrenched in a tragic idiom. The author then describes Byron's prolonged struggle to break clear of the imaginative limitations imposed by that tragic idiom and to break into a sustainable comic mode: a struggle that drives Childe Harold III, The Prisoner of Chillon, and The Dream only to culminate in success in Childe Harold IV. It is here, as Rawes demonstrates, that the path forward into the comic mode of Beppo and Don Juan is discovered. Byron's Poetic Experimentation also offers a substantial reconsideration of Byron's shifting attitude towards Wordsworthian idealism and a detailed analysis of the structured eclecticism of Manfred.
Author: Clara Tuite
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2015
Total Pages: 347
ISBN-13: 1107082595
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book examines the relationship between Lord Byron's life and work, and the Regency culture of scandal.
Author: Patricia Cove
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Published: 2019-05-14
Total Pages: 200
ISBN-13: 1474447260
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis book examines the intersections among literary works by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Mary Shelley and Wilkie Collins, journalism, parliamentary records and pamphlets, to establish Britain's imaginative investment in the seismic geopolitical realignment of Italian unification.
Author: H. Zeng
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2010-09-27
Total Pages: 273
ISBN-13: 0230113117
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFurthering the scholarship on writers and artists as diverse as Lord Byron, Edvard Munch, Sylvia Plath, and Jorge Luis Borges, Zeng probes the semiotics of exile. In artistic traditions the world over, exile exerts a potent and complex mythmaking power - whether it is manifest as a geographical dislocation or as a sense of cultural or psychological alienation.
Author: Jan Borm
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Published: 2014-10-16
Total Pages: 250
ISBN-13: 1443869104
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThough writers and readers have long agreed that travel does not only broaden the mind, but that it is also useful to report on such an experience, the question of what to report on and how has remained a matter of debate. To think of travel and travel writing as “foreign correspondence” is to apply, metaphorically, a phrase that has its own complex and overlapping history in journalism, politics, and international culture. The chapters of this volume focus on this notion, seen here as a dual problematic oscillating between the private and the public, whether as letters or other forms of writing sent from abroad. From Mandeville’s notorious Travels to fin de siècle Hispanic writing, this volume offers readings of accounts by early modern and more recent Lithuanian and Polish travellers, representations of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Ottoman Empire and India, Quixotic tropes in English travel writing about Spain, Galignani’s newspaper aesthetics, and several contributions on translation issues and the foreign as an idiom to be rendered in more familiar terms. The essays collected here thus all take foreign correspondence as their starting point, whether as letters or in other narrative forms. These texts are involved in complex webs of personal, political, social, and cultural negotiations between travellers and their hosts, as well as their presumed target audience; a key aspect of the rhetorics of foreign correspondence, as the chapters of this volume also go to show.
Author: Christopher Isherwood
Publisher: Macmillan + ORM
Published: 2015-11-03
Total Pages: 257
ISBN-13: 0374187703
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA witty, appealing, and often outrageous portrait of some of the twentieth century's most influential and creative minds Subtitled "An Education in the Twenties," Lions and Shadows blends autobiography and fiction to describe the inner life of a writer evolving from precocious schoolboy to Cambridge dropout-at-large in London's bohemia. It contains thinly veiled portraits of Christopher Isherwood's contemporaries W. H. Auden, Edward Upward, and Stephen Spender, whose intimate friendships and cult of rebellion shaped the literary identity of England in the 1930s. Witty and outrageous, Isherwood pokes fun at the stars of his generation, above all himself, even as he testifies to their unique early gifts.