The Cambridge Companion to Eighteenth-Century PoetryAltogether the volume provides an invaluable resource for scholars and students."--BOOK JACKET. |
Čo hovoria ostatní - Napísať recenziu
Na obvyklých miestach sme nenašli žiadne recenzie.
Obsah
Introduction the future of eighteenthcentury poetry | 1 |
Couplets and conversation | 11 |
Political passions | 37 |
Publishing and reading poetry | 63 |
The city in eighteenthcentury poetry | 83 |
Nature poetry | 109 |
Questions in poetics why and how poetry matters | 133 |
Eighteenthcentury women poets and readers | 157 |
Creating a national poetry the tradition of Spenser and Milton | 177 |
The return to the ode | 203 |
A poetry of absence | 225 |
The poetry of sensibility | 249 |
PreRomanticism and the ends of eighteenthcentury poetry | 271 |
291 | |
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
appear become begins British called Cambridge Cambridge Companion century changes claim classical Collection concern conversation couplets Cowper create critics culture death desire developed dreams Dryden early edited eighteenth eighteenth-century emotion English Epistle Essay example experience expression fancy feeling figure future gives Gray human imagination imitation important influence issues James John Johnson Joseph kind Lady language later less lines literary literature living London look lyric Mary Milton mind moral nature opening opposition Oxford period pleasure poem poet's poetic poetry poets political Pope Pope's popular present prose published readers reading rhyme Robert Romantic satire seems sense sensibility social sonnet Spenser Studies sublime suggests Swift Thomas Thomson thought tion tradition turn University Press verse voice Warton Whig women writing written York young