48,95 €
48,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
48,95 €
Als Download kaufen
48,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
- Format: ePub
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
The 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 students and researchers to read the material themselves.
- Geräte: eReader
- mit Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 0.63MB
The 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 students and researchers to read the material themselves.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 520
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. September 2003
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134783960
- Artikelnr.: 42683460
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 520
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. September 2003
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781134783960
- Artikelnr.: 42683460
Derek Brewer
INTRODUCTION
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE THE PRINCIPAL EDITIONS OF CHAUCER'S 'WORKS' UP TO 1933 1 RALPH WALDO EMERSON
The identity of all minds
1837
1849 (1850)
1856 2 RICHARD HENGIST HORNE
Translations
1841 3 HENRY DAVID THOREAU
Homely
innocent
childish Chaucer
1843 (1849) 4 'CHRISTOPHER NORTH' (John Wilson)
The allegory of love
1845 5 SIR NICHOLAS HARRIS NICOLAS
A Life founded on documentary evidence
1845 6 JOHN HENRY LEIGH HUNT
Geniality
singing
1846
1855 7 JAMES LORIMER
Chaucer is our Goethe
1849 8 WILLIAM WATKISS LLOYD
Chaucer's irony
1856 9 JOHN RUSKIN
Fimesis and other matters
1856
1865
1870
1873
1876 10 WALTER BAGEHOT
A healthy sagacious man of the world with a symmetrical mind
1858 11 UNKNOWN
Story
situation and beauty
1859 12 FRANCIS JAMES CHILD
Final -e
1863 (1869) 13 WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR
Creatures like ourselves
1863 14 ALEXANDER SMITH
Chaucer the English Conservative
1863 15 FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE
Cordial affection for men and for nature
1865 16 'MATTHEW BROWNE' (William Brightly Rands)
Chaucer the Laodicean
1869 17 JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
Sincere
tender
humane
1870 (1871) 18 STOPFORD A.BROOKE
Natural beauty
1871 19 FREDERICK JAMES FURNIVALL
Work at Chaucer
1873 20 JOHN WESLEY HALES
Pity and irony
1873 21 WILLIAM MINTO
The spirit of chivalry
1876 22 WILLIAM CYPLES
Incredible sentimentality
and the old wonder of sex
1877 23 ADOLPHUS WILLIAM WARD
Dramatist and novelist
1879 24 MATTHEW ARNOLD
Chaucer lacks seriousness
1880 25 GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS
Chaucer's scanning
1880
1881 26 ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE
The middle class
1880
1886 27 WILLIAM MORRIS
Gentleman and happy child
1888 28 THOMAS RAYNSFORD LOUNSBURY
Chaucer avoids dull English seriousness
1891 29 WILLIAM PATON KER
The commonplace transformed
1895 30 F.J.SNELL
Chaucer is the most irresponsible of men
1901 31 SIR WALTER RALEIGH
Irony and simple good English
1905 (1926) 32 W.M.HART
Realism
unity and comic poetic justice
1908 33 GEORGE SAINTSBURY
Chaucer's humour
1908 34 JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL
Daylight and romance
1909 35 WILLIAM WITHERLE LAWRENCE
To show it as it was
1911 36 GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE
A connected human comedy
1912 37 EZRA POUND
Chaucer should be on every man's shelf
1914
1918
1927
1934
38 HARRIET MONROE
Chaucer and Langland
1915 39 JOHN S.P.TATLOCK
Chaucer the Laodicean
1916 40 ALDOUS HUXLEY
In love with the inevitably material
1920 41 CAROLINE F.E.SPURGEON
Critics of Chaucer judge themselves not him
1925 42 VIRGINIA WOOLF
The morality of the novel
1925 43 JOHN MATTHEWS MANLY
From art to nature
1926 44 MARIO PRAZ
Chaucer the merchantman
1927 45 THOMAS FREDERICK TOUT
A prudent courtier
1929 46 WILLIAM EMPSON
The ambiguity of Chaucer
1930 47 JOHN LIVINGSTONE LOWES
A powerfully associative memory
1930 48 CLIVE STAPLES LEWIS
What Chaucer really did to 'Il Filostrato'
1932 49 GILBERT KEITH CHESTERTON
Never a less typical poet
1933 50 THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT
Is Chaucer less serious than Words-worth? 1933 51 ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN
Sensitive fidelity to nature
1933 52 ROSEMOND TUVE. Chaucer and the seasons
1933
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE THE PRINCIPAL EDITIONS OF CHAUCER'S 'WORKS' UP TO 1933 1 RALPH WALDO EMERSON
The identity of all minds
1837
1849 (1850)
1856 2 RICHARD HENGIST HORNE
Translations
1841 3 HENRY DAVID THOREAU
Homely
innocent
childish Chaucer
1843 (1849) 4 'CHRISTOPHER NORTH' (John Wilson)
The allegory of love
1845 5 SIR NICHOLAS HARRIS NICOLAS
A Life founded on documentary evidence
1845 6 JOHN HENRY LEIGH HUNT
Geniality
singing
1846
1855 7 JAMES LORIMER
Chaucer is our Goethe
1849 8 WILLIAM WATKISS LLOYD
Chaucer's irony
1856 9 JOHN RUSKIN
Fimesis and other matters
1856
1865
1870
1873
1876 10 WALTER BAGEHOT
A healthy sagacious man of the world with a symmetrical mind
1858 11 UNKNOWN
Story
situation and beauty
1859 12 FRANCIS JAMES CHILD
Final -e
1863 (1869) 13 WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR
Creatures like ourselves
1863 14 ALEXANDER SMITH
Chaucer the English Conservative
1863 15 FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE
Cordial affection for men and for nature
1865 16 'MATTHEW BROWNE' (William Brightly Rands)
Chaucer the Laodicean
1869 17 JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
Sincere
tender
humane
1870 (1871) 18 STOPFORD A.BROOKE
Natural beauty
1871 19 FREDERICK JAMES FURNIVALL
Work at Chaucer
1873 20 JOHN WESLEY HALES
Pity and irony
1873 21 WILLIAM MINTO
The spirit of chivalry
1876 22 WILLIAM CYPLES
Incredible sentimentality
and the old wonder of sex
1877 23 ADOLPHUS WILLIAM WARD
Dramatist and novelist
1879 24 MATTHEW ARNOLD
Chaucer lacks seriousness
1880 25 GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS
Chaucer's scanning
1880
1881 26 ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE
The middle class
1880
1886 27 WILLIAM MORRIS
Gentleman and happy child
1888 28 THOMAS RAYNSFORD LOUNSBURY
Chaucer avoids dull English seriousness
1891 29 WILLIAM PATON KER
The commonplace transformed
1895 30 F.J.SNELL
Chaucer is the most irresponsible of men
1901 31 SIR WALTER RALEIGH
Irony and simple good English
1905 (1926) 32 W.M.HART
Realism
unity and comic poetic justice
1908 33 GEORGE SAINTSBURY
Chaucer's humour
1908 34 JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL
Daylight and romance
1909 35 WILLIAM WITHERLE LAWRENCE
To show it as it was
1911 36 GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE
A connected human comedy
1912 37 EZRA POUND
Chaucer should be on every man's shelf
1914
1918
1927
1934
38 HARRIET MONROE
Chaucer and Langland
1915 39 JOHN S.P.TATLOCK
Chaucer the Laodicean
1916 40 ALDOUS HUXLEY
In love with the inevitably material
1920 41 CAROLINE F.E.SPURGEON
Critics of Chaucer judge themselves not him
1925 42 VIRGINIA WOOLF
The morality of the novel
1925 43 JOHN MATTHEWS MANLY
From art to nature
1926 44 MARIO PRAZ
Chaucer the merchantman
1927 45 THOMAS FREDERICK TOUT
A prudent courtier
1929 46 WILLIAM EMPSON
The ambiguity of Chaucer
1930 47 JOHN LIVINGSTONE LOWES
A powerfully associative memory
1930 48 CLIVE STAPLES LEWIS
What Chaucer really did to 'Il Filostrato'
1932 49 GILBERT KEITH CHESTERTON
Never a less typical poet
1933 50 THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT
Is Chaucer less serious than Words-worth? 1933 51 ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN
Sensitive fidelity to nature
1933 52 ROSEMOND TUVE. Chaucer and the seasons
1933
INTRODUCTION
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE THE PRINCIPAL EDITIONS OF CHAUCER'S 'WORKS' UP TO 1933 1 RALPH WALDO EMERSON
The identity of all minds
1837
1849 (1850)
1856 2 RICHARD HENGIST HORNE
Translations
1841 3 HENRY DAVID THOREAU
Homely
innocent
childish Chaucer
1843 (1849) 4 'CHRISTOPHER NORTH' (John Wilson)
The allegory of love
1845 5 SIR NICHOLAS HARRIS NICOLAS
A Life founded on documentary evidence
1845 6 JOHN HENRY LEIGH HUNT
Geniality
singing
1846
1855 7 JAMES LORIMER
Chaucer is our Goethe
1849 8 WILLIAM WATKISS LLOYD
Chaucer's irony
1856 9 JOHN RUSKIN
Fimesis and other matters
1856
1865
1870
1873
1876 10 WALTER BAGEHOT
A healthy sagacious man of the world with a symmetrical mind
1858 11 UNKNOWN
Story
situation and beauty
1859 12 FRANCIS JAMES CHILD
Final -e
1863 (1869) 13 WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR
Creatures like ourselves
1863 14 ALEXANDER SMITH
Chaucer the English Conservative
1863 15 FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE
Cordial affection for men and for nature
1865 16 'MATTHEW BROWNE' (William Brightly Rands)
Chaucer the Laodicean
1869 17 JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
Sincere
tender
humane
1870 (1871) 18 STOPFORD A.BROOKE
Natural beauty
1871 19 FREDERICK JAMES FURNIVALL
Work at Chaucer
1873 20 JOHN WESLEY HALES
Pity and irony
1873 21 WILLIAM MINTO
The spirit of chivalry
1876 22 WILLIAM CYPLES
Incredible sentimentality
and the old wonder of sex
1877 23 ADOLPHUS WILLIAM WARD
Dramatist and novelist
1879 24 MATTHEW ARNOLD
Chaucer lacks seriousness
1880 25 GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS
Chaucer's scanning
1880
1881 26 ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE
The middle class
1880
1886 27 WILLIAM MORRIS
Gentleman and happy child
1888 28 THOMAS RAYNSFORD LOUNSBURY
Chaucer avoids dull English seriousness
1891 29 WILLIAM PATON KER
The commonplace transformed
1895 30 F.J.SNELL
Chaucer is the most irresponsible of men
1901 31 SIR WALTER RALEIGH
Irony and simple good English
1905 (1926) 32 W.M.HART
Realism
unity and comic poetic justice
1908 33 GEORGE SAINTSBURY
Chaucer's humour
1908 34 JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL
Daylight and romance
1909 35 WILLIAM WITHERLE LAWRENCE
To show it as it was
1911 36 GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE
A connected human comedy
1912 37 EZRA POUND
Chaucer should be on every man's shelf
1914
1918
1927
1934
38 HARRIET MONROE
Chaucer and Langland
1915 39 JOHN S.P.TATLOCK
Chaucer the Laodicean
1916 40 ALDOUS HUXLEY
In love with the inevitably material
1920 41 CAROLINE F.E.SPURGEON
Critics of Chaucer judge themselves not him
1925 42 VIRGINIA WOOLF
The morality of the novel
1925 43 JOHN MATTHEWS MANLY
From art to nature
1926 44 MARIO PRAZ
Chaucer the merchantman
1927 45 THOMAS FREDERICK TOUT
A prudent courtier
1929 46 WILLIAM EMPSON
The ambiguity of Chaucer
1930 47 JOHN LIVINGSTONE LOWES
A powerfully associative memory
1930 48 CLIVE STAPLES LEWIS
What Chaucer really did to 'Il Filostrato'
1932 49 GILBERT KEITH CHESTERTON
Never a less typical poet
1933 50 THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT
Is Chaucer less serious than Words-worth? 1933 51 ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN
Sensitive fidelity to nature
1933 52 ROSEMOND TUVE. Chaucer and the seasons
1933
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE THE PRINCIPAL EDITIONS OF CHAUCER'S 'WORKS' UP TO 1933 1 RALPH WALDO EMERSON
The identity of all minds
1837
1849 (1850)
1856 2 RICHARD HENGIST HORNE
Translations
1841 3 HENRY DAVID THOREAU
Homely
innocent
childish Chaucer
1843 (1849) 4 'CHRISTOPHER NORTH' (John Wilson)
The allegory of love
1845 5 SIR NICHOLAS HARRIS NICOLAS
A Life founded on documentary evidence
1845 6 JOHN HENRY LEIGH HUNT
Geniality
singing
1846
1855 7 JAMES LORIMER
Chaucer is our Goethe
1849 8 WILLIAM WATKISS LLOYD
Chaucer's irony
1856 9 JOHN RUSKIN
Fimesis and other matters
1856
1865
1870
1873
1876 10 WALTER BAGEHOT
A healthy sagacious man of the world with a symmetrical mind
1858 11 UNKNOWN
Story
situation and beauty
1859 12 FRANCIS JAMES CHILD
Final -e
1863 (1869) 13 WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR
Creatures like ourselves
1863 14 ALEXANDER SMITH
Chaucer the English Conservative
1863 15 FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE
Cordial affection for men and for nature
1865 16 'MATTHEW BROWNE' (William Brightly Rands)
Chaucer the Laodicean
1869 17 JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
Sincere
tender
humane
1870 (1871) 18 STOPFORD A.BROOKE
Natural beauty
1871 19 FREDERICK JAMES FURNIVALL
Work at Chaucer
1873 20 JOHN WESLEY HALES
Pity and irony
1873 21 WILLIAM MINTO
The spirit of chivalry
1876 22 WILLIAM CYPLES
Incredible sentimentality
and the old wonder of sex
1877 23 ADOLPHUS WILLIAM WARD
Dramatist and novelist
1879 24 MATTHEW ARNOLD
Chaucer lacks seriousness
1880 25 GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS
Chaucer's scanning
1880
1881 26 ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE
The middle class
1880
1886 27 WILLIAM MORRIS
Gentleman and happy child
1888 28 THOMAS RAYNSFORD LOUNSBURY
Chaucer avoids dull English seriousness
1891 29 WILLIAM PATON KER
The commonplace transformed
1895 30 F.J.SNELL
Chaucer is the most irresponsible of men
1901 31 SIR WALTER RALEIGH
Irony and simple good English
1905 (1926) 32 W.M.HART
Realism
unity and comic poetic justice
1908 33 GEORGE SAINTSBURY
Chaucer's humour
1908 34 JOHN WILLIAM MACKAIL
Daylight and romance
1909 35 WILLIAM WITHERLE LAWRENCE
To show it as it was
1911 36 GEORGE LYMAN KITTREDGE
A connected human comedy
1912 37 EZRA POUND
Chaucer should be on every man's shelf
1914
1918
1927
1934
38 HARRIET MONROE
Chaucer and Langland
1915 39 JOHN S.P.TATLOCK
Chaucer the Laodicean
1916 40 ALDOUS HUXLEY
In love with the inevitably material
1920 41 CAROLINE F.E.SPURGEON
Critics of Chaucer judge themselves not him
1925 42 VIRGINIA WOOLF
The morality of the novel
1925 43 JOHN MATTHEWS MANLY
From art to nature
1926 44 MARIO PRAZ
Chaucer the merchantman
1927 45 THOMAS FREDERICK TOUT
A prudent courtier
1929 46 WILLIAM EMPSON
The ambiguity of Chaucer
1930 47 JOHN LIVINGSTONE LOWES
A powerfully associative memory
1930 48 CLIVE STAPLES LEWIS
What Chaucer really did to 'Il Filostrato'
1932 49 GILBERT KEITH CHESTERTON
Never a less typical poet
1933 50 THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT
Is Chaucer less serious than Words-worth? 1933 51 ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN
Sensitive fidelity to nature
1933 52 ROSEMOND TUVE. Chaucer and the seasons
1933