John KeatsHarold Bloom Chelsea House, 2007 - 272 páginas Romantic poet, John Keats was only 25 when he died of tuberculosis, but his work has achieved canonical status. Poet and critic Matthew Arnold said of Keats, In the faculty of naturalistic interpretation, in what we call natural magic, he ranks with Shakespeare. Keats' more recognizable poems include Ode on a Grecian Urn, Ode to a Nightingale, and Ode on Melancholy. Updated with all-new, full-length critical essays selected by Harold Bloom, this volume will draw students into an in-depth study of the brilliant young poet. A chronology, notes on the contributors, and a bibliography round out this useful resource. |
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Página 166
... epigram as contributing to a kind of New Critical thematic unity.18 What is required is what Thomas Kuhn calls a " paradigm shift . " If there is an identifiable sense lurking in this most notoriously inscrutable of Romantic oracles ...
... epigram as contributing to a kind of New Critical thematic unity.18 What is required is what Thomas Kuhn calls a " paradigm shift . " If there is an identifiable sense lurking in this most notoriously inscrutable of Romantic oracles ...
Página 178
... epigram is meant to be anomalous , a rhetorical trump Keats has kept up his sleeve all along . Showcased in its quotation marks , itself museumed , the motto flashes its message in the twinkling of an eye , in nearly the same time it ...
... epigram is meant to be anomalous , a rhetorical trump Keats has kept up his sleeve all along . Showcased in its quotation marks , itself museumed , the motto flashes its message in the twinkling of an eye , in nearly the same time it ...
Página 179
... epigram's circular beauty borrows from the urn's ) . As Athena at the end of the myth installs the image of Medusa on her shield — thereby taming it , turning it into an aesthetic icon - so Keats encapsulates the urn in an epigram ...
... epigram's circular beauty borrows from the urn's ) . As Athena at the end of the myth installs the image of Medusa on her shield — thereby taming it , turning it into an aesthetic icon - so Keats encapsulates the urn in an epigram ...
Contenido
The Ode to Psyche | 13 |
Nightingale and Melancholy | 37 |
Hyperion and The Fall of Hyperion | 97 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
aesthetic allegorical Apollo ballad beauty becomes belle dame Book bower Cockney School consciousness critics Cupid Dame sans Merci death diction dream early draft ekphrasis Elgin Marbles Endymion erotic essay Eve of St eyes faery Fall of Hyperion Fancy Fanny Brawne fetish gaze genre Grecian Urn happy honey human Hunt's imagination implied Indicator version Indolence John Keats Keats's Keats's poem Keatsian knight Lamia language Leigh Hunt letter lines literary look Madeline meaning Melancholy Milton Moneta myth narrative narrator natural Nightingale object Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche Petrarchan Petrarchan sonnet phrase poem's Poesy poet poet's poetic figures political Porphyro readers represents rhyme Romantic seems sense sestet sexual Shakespearean Shelley Shelley's song sonnet soul speaker Spenser Spenserian St Agnes stanza twenty-four sublime suggests sweet symbol tradition truth Univ University Press urn's verse vision visual voice wild words Wordsworth writing
Referencias a este libro
Lacan, Discourse, and Social Change: A Psychoanalytic Cultural Criticism Mark Bracher Vista previa limitada - 1993 |