Wordsworth in His Major Lyrics: The Art and Psychology of Self-representationUniversity of Missouri Press, 2001 - 180 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 74
1 psl.
... nature of the question avoids an unqualified substitution and allows for a fictional dimension in the character of the speaker. In their introduction to the Romantic period in The Norton Anthology of English Literature, the editors ...
... nature of the question avoids an unqualified substitution and allows for a fictional dimension in the character of the speaker. In their introduction to the Romantic period in The Norton Anthology of English Literature, the editors ...
5 psl.
... nature of material and social existence and supporting the enabling fiction of his transcendence of it . He is overtaken by a " blindness which assumes autonomy of the psyche , its happy detachment from the social fact of being ...
... nature of material and social existence and supporting the enabling fiction of his transcendence of it . He is overtaken by a " blindness which assumes autonomy of the psyche , its happy detachment from the social fact of being ...
9 psl.
... nature of the major lyrics. Unlike the major lyrics, whose deep elegiac strains are ultimately for the speaker's self, the Lucy poems are short elegies for another person. Yet the central irony of them is that the self-dramatizing ...
... nature of the major lyrics. Unlike the major lyrics, whose deep elegiac strains are ultimately for the speaker's self, the Lucy poems are short elegies for another person. Yet the central irony of them is that the self-dramatizing ...
11 psl.
... nature of these poems brings me to the final con- sideration in selecting them for study. Because of the substantial body of extratextual material surrounding them (particularly Wordsworth's notes to Isabella Fenwick, his notes to ...
... nature of these poems brings me to the final con- sideration in selecting them for study. Because of the substantial body of extratextual material surrounding them (particularly Wordsworth's notes to Isabella Fenwick, his notes to ...
12 psl.
... nature of Wordsworth's major lyrics has still not received the kind of sustained critical analysis it deserves . A great deal of his poetic art has been devoted to dramatizing each speaker's utterance , but the dramatic strategies that ...
... nature of Wordsworth's major lyrics has still not received the kind of sustained critical analysis it deserves . A great deal of his poetic art has been devoted to dramatizing each speaker's utterance , but the dramatic strategies that ...
Turinys
Transitional Self | 15 |
The Dramatics of SelfRepresentation in Tintern | 47 |
Resolution | 77 |
Public Performance Subjective | 103 |
The Poet in His Letters | 130 |
The Prelude as a Major Lyric | 152 |
Works Cited | 165 |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Wordsworth in His Major Lyrics– The Art and Psychology of Self-representation Leon Waldoff Peržiūra negalima - 2001 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
achieved act of self-representation anxiety apostrophe appears autobiographical awareness Beaumont character climactic Coleridge Coleridge's conception consciousness critical death dejection Dorothy Wordsworth dramatic earlier Elegiac Stanzas emphasizes encounter Ernest de Selincourt Essays expressivist father feelings Fenwick Notes fictional Freud human ideal identifies imagination important Intimations Ode Isabella Fenwick John John Keats Keats language Leech-gatherer letters lines lyric speaker Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams major lyrics memory mind moments mood Mount Snowdon narration narrative Nature notion person phrase poem poet speaking poet's poetic Prelude presence Prose psychological questions reading recognition reenactment relationship repetition representation represents Resolution and Independence Romantic lyric Romantic poetry Romanticism says scene self-dramatizing self-transformation sense of loss soul speaker of Tintern speaker's thoughts speaker's utterance splitting strategies structure subjectivity sublime suggest things Tintern Abbey tradition transformation transitional traumatic understanding University Press verse paragraph voice William Wordsworth words Wordsworth's poetry Wye valley