Romantic Aversions: Aftermaths of Classicism in Wordsworth and ColeridgeMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 18/12/1998 - 240 من الصفحات In Romantic Aversions J. Douglas Kneale explicates the "double gesture" in the repression of the classical tradition by focusing on its rhetorical afterlife in the literary styles of Wordsworth and Coleridge. He provides new interpretations of both canonical and non-canonical texts and explores aspects of Wordsworth's and Coleridge's manuscripts and poems previously overlooked by scholars. Kneale combines original, close readings with the larger sweep of genre study to reveal new and unexpected convergences in the Romantic tradition. |
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الصفحة 4
... interest instead lies in reading specific moments in the fate of a classical rhetorical tradition carried on into the literary style and topoi of the first - generation Romantics . Interpretation has always been a quest - romance , as ...
... interest instead lies in reading specific moments in the fate of a classical rhetorical tradition carried on into the literary style and topoi of the first - generation Romantics . Interpretation has always been a quest - romance , as ...
الصفحة 6
... interests as well as my critical sense of what is going on in a given text . While each chapter positions its subject in a larger context , whether that of the history of style or the development of an œuvre , my individual readings ...
... interests as well as my critical sense of what is going on in a given text . While each chapter positions its subject in a larger context , whether that of the history of style or the development of an œuvre , my individual readings ...
الصفحة 7
... interest in moral and thematic issues , and his focus on Wordsworth's poetry after 1807 , set a critical agenda that " contained " the problem of Wordsworth's classicism . More recently , Bryan Crockett , in discussing this same note by ...
... interest in moral and thematic issues , and his focus on Wordsworth's poetry after 1807 , set a critical agenda that " contained " the problem of Wordsworth's classicism . More recently , Bryan Crockett , in discussing this same note by ...
الصفحة 13
... interests the reader more is Quintilian's first definition of apostrophe : " The figure which the Greeks call apostrophe , by which is meant the diversion of our words to address some person other than the judge , is entirely banned by ...
... interests the reader more is Quintilian's first definition of apostrophe : " The figure which the Greeks call apostrophe , by which is meant the diversion of our words to address some person other than the judge , is entirely banned by ...
الصفحة 17
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المحتوى
3 | |
11 | |
Coleridges Romantic Effusions | 28 |
Wordsworth and the Sympathies of Rhetoric | 50 |
To the Autumnal Moon | 71 |
5 Transport and Persuasion in Longinus and Wordsworth | 94 |
6 Wordsworth in the Isle of Man | 104 |
7 Symptom and Scene in Freud and Wordsworth | 115 |
Reading Wordsworth after Geoffrey Hartman | 135 |
Notes | 155 |
Works Cited | 193 |
Index | 213 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
analogy apostrophe Autumnal Moon aversio aversion Bowles Bowles's Boy of Winander calls chapter classical Coleridge Coleridge's context convention critics Culler dear discourse echoes ecphonesis Effusions English Eolian Eolian Harp epic simile epideictic episode epitaphic essay example exclamation figure Fletcher Christian Freud genre gentle Geoffrey Hartman heart imagery imagination interpretation intertextual Isle language later letter lines literal literary Liu's Longinus Lycidas lyric Lyrical Ballads Manx Milton nature Norton Prelude Nutting Paradise Lost passage passion personification persuasion phrase Poems on Various poet poet's poetic Prose prosopopoeia question Quintilian reader reading rhetorical Romantic Romanticism Samuel Taylor Coleridge says scene sense sequacious sestet Shakespeare sonnet speaking structure style sublime suggests symptom textual thee theory things thou Tintern Abbey tion topos tradition trees trope turn University Press Vale verse voice William Wordsworth Winander's word Wordsworth writes Wordsworth's Poetry worth