The Child Figure in English LiteratureGraveyards or wonderlands have more often than firesides and nurseries been the element in which we encounter the child in English literature, and Robert Pattison begins his narrative by asking why literary children are seldom associated with parents and family, but instead repeatedly occur as solitary figures against a background of social and philosophic melancholy. In a skillful fusion of theology, social history, and literature, Pattison isolates and analyzes the repeated conjunction of the literary figure of the child with two fundamental ideas of Western culture--the fall of man and the concept of Original Sin. His study of child figures used in English literature and their antecedents in classical literature and early Christian writing documents the symbiotic development of an idea and an image. Pattison encounters a wide range of literary offspring, among whom are Marvell's little girls, Gray's young Etonians, Blake's children of innocence and experience, the youthful narrators of Dickens and Gosse, the children of George Eliot and Henry James, and the young protagonists in the children's literature of James Janeway, Christina Rossetti, and Lewis Carroll. |
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Crítica de los usuarios - waltzmn - LibraryThingI suppose being Fall-opian is better than being Freudian. I'd seen this book cited in several other books I'd read, so I finally decided to get it and find out what all the fuss was about. A mistake ... Leer comentario completo
Contenido
The Child Figure from Homer to Augustine | 1 |
The Preromantic English Tradition | 21 |
The Sentimental Aspects of the Child Figure Wordsworth as Heretic | 47 |
The Children of Dickens George Eliot and Henry James | 76 |
Through the Childs Eyes Gosse Dickens and Henry James | 108 |
Children in Childrens Literature James Janeway to Lewis Carroll | 135 |
Notes | 161 |
171 | |
185 | |