Shelley: A Critical ReadingJohns Hopkins University Press, 1971 - 507 páginas In Shelley: Poet and Legislator of the World Betty T. Bennett and Stuart Curran bring together an internationally recognized group of scholars to focus on Percy Bysshe Shelley's conception of the poet's social role and how that conception has changed over time. The authors consider the cultural and political forces within Shelley's society and his attempts to establish a new role for the poet in its renovation. They examine the ways in which Shelley's thought engages contemporary debates on feminism, class structure, political representation, and human rights, and how it in turn affects radical politics in England. They describe his impact on other cultures, particularly in national liberation movements of both the 19th and 20th centuries. And they discuss the continuing presence and relevance of his ideas within the contemporary social and intellectual arena. Contributors: Donald H. Reiman, Greg Kucich, Terence Hoagwood, William Keach, Mark Kipperman, Michael Erkelenz, Gary Kelly, Annnette Wheeler Cafarelli, Neil Fraistat, Michael Scrivener, Bouthaina Shaaban, E. Douka Kabitoglou, Lilla Maria Crisafulli Jones, Marilyn Butler, Meena Alexander, Alan Weinberg, Steven E. Jones, Horst Höhne, Andrew J. Bennett, Karen A. Weisman, P.M.S. Dawson, Tilottama Rajan, Linda Brigham, Arkady Plotnitsky. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 87
... poetic corpus forms a coherent design and have arranged the individual analyses in that order which appears most ... poetic mind , we recognize it as limited to the world of existence . Such poems as Mont Blanc , Prometheus Un- bound ...
... poetic mind , and therefore just as the noon glory may indifferently be the Absolute or the poet's mind , so the poem identifies all poets with Apollonian light . Byron , already famous for his address in Childe Harold to the " deep and ...
... poet was more true . " 16 It is the very identification of sporadic , un- willed poetic conception with the divinity in man that allows Shelley to set off poetry as a uniquely human act , for if poetic conception is the apprehension of ...
Contenido
The Intellectual Philosophy | 131 |
The Imaginations World | 154 |
Intellectual Beauty and the Self | 180 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 5 secciones no mostradas