Wordsworth and the Vocabulary of Emotion
Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher: Buccaneer Books
Published: 1965
Total Pages: 204
ISBN-13:
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Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher: Buccaneer Books
Published: 1965
Total Pages: 204
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: G. Kim Blank
Publisher: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Published: 1995
Total Pages: 284
ISBN-13: 9780838636008
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWordsworth and Feeling returns to Wordsworth's personal history in order to locate and contextualize some of the most remarkable poetry in the English language. In this study, G. Kim Blank details how this poetry evolves out of Wordsworth's radical subjectivity, but the most pressing feature of that subjectivity is the cluster of subjects - loss, guilt, suffering, endurance, death - which appears throughout much of his poetry up until 1802-4.
Author: Hugh Sykes-Davies
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 1986
Total Pages: 342
ISBN-13: 0521309093
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn this book Hugh Sykes Davies addresses Wordworth's major poetry from the perspectives of language, Freud, Coleridge and the Romantic Imagination. A remarkable combination of analytic and empathic intelligence, this book should earn a place among the few essential studies of the poet.
Author: Josephine Miles
Publisher:
Published: 1942
Total Pages: 204
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Patricia Waugh
Publisher:
Published: 2006
Total Pages: 632
ISBN-13: 9780199291335
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis volume offers a comprehensive account of modern literary criticism, presenting the field as part of an ongoing historical and intellectual tradition. Featuring thirty-nine specially commissioned chapters from an international team of esteemed contributors, it fills a large gap in the market by combining the accessibility of single-authored selections with a wide range of critical perspectives. The volume is divided into four parts. Part One covers the key philosophical and aesthetic origins of literary theory, while Part Two discusses the foundational movements and thinkers in the first half of the twentieth century. Part Three offers introductory overviews of the most important movements and thinkers in modern literary theory, and Part Four looks at emergent trends and future directions.
Author: Rachel Sagner Buurma
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 2020-12-04
Total Pages: 317
ISBN-13: 022673627X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Teaching Archive shows us a series of major literary thinkers in a place we seldom remember them inhabiting: the classroom. Rachel Sagner Buurma and Laura Heffernan open up “the teaching archive”—the syllabuses, course descriptions, lecture notes, and class assignments—of critics and scholars including T. S. Eliot, Caroline Spurgeon, I. A. Richards, Edith Rickert, J. Saunders Redding, Edmund Wilson, Cleanth Brooks, Josephine Miles, and Simon J. Ortiz. This new history of English rewrites what we know about the discipline by showing how students helped write foundational works of literary criticism and how English classes at community colleges and HBCUs pioneered the reading methods and expanded canons that came only belatedly to the Ivy League. It reminds us that research and teaching, which institutions often imagine as separate, have always been intertwined in practice. In a contemporary moment of humanities defunding, the casualization of teaching, and the privatization of pedagogy, The Teaching Archive offers a more accurate view of the work we have done in the past and must continue to do in the future.
Author: Tim Milnes
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 2009-06-02
Total Pages: 206
ISBN-13: 135030946X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Prelude is now seen as a central text in the Wordsworth corpus. This Guide identifies and gathers significant critical perspectives, interpretations and debates connected with the poem, contextualising and explaining criticism from the Victorian period right through to the present day.
Author: Anahid Nersessian
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 2020-08-12
Total Pages: 224
ISBN-13: 022670131X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRomanticism coincided with two major historical developments: the Industrial Revolution, and with it, a turning point in our relationship to the earth, its inhabitants, and its climate. Drawing on Marxism and philosophy of science, The Calamity Form shines new light on Romantic poetry, identifying a number of rhetorical tropes used by writers to underscore their very failure to make sense of our move to industrialization. Anahid Nersessian explores works by Friedrich Hölderlin, William Wordsworth, John Keats, and others to argue that as the human and ecological costs of industry became clear, Romantic poetry adopted formal strategies—among them parataxis, the setting of elements side by side in a manner suggestive of postindustrial dissonance, and apostrophe, here an address to an absent or vanishing natural environment—as it tried and failed to narrate the calamities of capitalism. These tropes reflect how Romantic authors took their bewilderment and turned it into a poetics: a theory of writing, reading, and understanding poetry as an eminently critical act. Throughout, Nersessian pushes back against recent attempts to see literature as a source of information on par with historical or scientific data, arguing instead for an irreducibility of poetic knowledge. Revealing the ways in which these Romantic works are of their time but not about it, The Calamity Form ultimately exposes the nature of poetry’s relationship to capital—and capital’s ability to hide how it works.
Author: Brian R Bates
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2015-10-06
Total Pages: 245
ISBN-13: 1317322274
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWordsworth’s process of revision, his organization of poetic volumes and his supplementary writings are often seen as distinct from his poetic composition. Bates asserts that an analysis of these supplementary writings and paratexts are necessary to a full understanding of Wordsworth’s poetry.
Author: Claudia Brodsky
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Published: 2020-09-03
Total Pages: 161
ISBN-13: 1501364545
DOWNLOAD EBOOKClaudia Brodsky marshals her equal expertise in literature and philosophy to redefine the terms and trajectory of the theory and interpretation of modern poetry. Taking her cue from Wordsworth's revolutionary understanding of “real language,” Brodsky unfolds a provocative new theory of poetry, a way of looking at poetry that challenges traditional assumptions. Analyzing both theory and practice, and taking in a broad swathe of writers and thinkers from Wordsworth to Rousseau to Hegel to Proust, Brodsky is at pains to draw out the transformative, active, and effective power of literature. Poetry, she says, is only worthy of the name when it is not the property of the poet but of society, when it is valued for what it does. Words' Worth is a bold new work, by a leading scholar of literature, which demands a response from all students and scholars of modern poetry.