Romantic Responses to Revolution through Miltonic Ideas of the Fall explores the influence of John Milton's epic poem, Paradise Lost, on a range of Romantic and post-Romantic writers.
Romantic Responses to Revolution through Miltonic Ideas of the Fall explores the influence of John Milton's epic poem, Paradise Lost, on a range of Romantic and post-Romantic writers.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Callum Fraser currently works as a commissioning editor at CRC Press/ Taylor & Francis. He received a PhD from Newcastle University in 2018 for research on the influence of Milton on the Romantics, as well as a related creative project. He maintains his interest in this literary period and is currently working on a Gothic novel set in rural Cumberland in 1824.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Part I. Romantic Poets' Responses to Miltonic Ideas of the Fall Chapter 1. First-Generation Romantics: Revolutionary Responses to Miltonic Ideas of the Fall 1.1. William Blake: Poetry as Rebellion - Reconciling Blake and Milton 1.2. Coleridge: Retrospective Conservatism and the Intervening Voice 1.3. Wordsworth: 'Two Consciousnesses' and The Consummation of the Poet's Mind Chapter 2. Byron and Keats: Intergenerational Conflict and Rising from the Fall 2.1. Byron: 'being/ Yourselves in your resistance': The Value of Ideological Integrity in Cain 2.2. Keats: The Necessary Transition to a New Poetic Order Part II. Writing from the Literary 'Lacuna': Divided Voices and Divided Sympathies Chapter 3. Frankenstein and Mary Shelley's Radical Scepticism Chapter 4. 'Neither Whig, Tory, Radical, nor Destructionist': The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner and the 'Polydoxy' of James Hogg Chapter 5. Wuthering Heights: 'As Different as a Moonbeam from Lightning' - Reconciling Romanticism and Victorianism Conclusion
Introduction Part I. Romantic Poets' Responses to Miltonic Ideas of the Fall Chapter 1. First-Generation Romantics: Revolutionary Responses to Miltonic Ideas of the Fall 1.1. William Blake: Poetry as Rebellion - Reconciling Blake and Milton 1.2. Coleridge: Retrospective Conservatism and the Intervening Voice 1.3. Wordsworth: 'Two Consciousnesses' and The Consummation of the Poet's Mind Chapter 2. Byron and Keats: Intergenerational Conflict and Rising from the Fall 2.1. Byron: 'being/ Yourselves in your resistance': The Value of Ideological Integrity in Cain 2.2. Keats: The Necessary Transition to a New Poetic Order Part II. Writing from the Literary 'Lacuna': Divided Voices and Divided Sympathies Chapter 3. Frankenstein and Mary Shelley's Radical Scepticism Chapter 4. 'Neither Whig, Tory, Radical, nor Destructionist': The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner and the 'Polydoxy' of James Hogg Chapter 5. Wuthering Heights: 'As Different as a Moonbeam from Lightning' - Reconciling Romanticism and Victorianism Conclusion
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