Lord Byron and Madame de Staël: Born for OppositionAshgate, 1999 - 210 sider The British poet Lord Byron and the French writer Madame de Staël both made a great impact on a Europe in the throes of the Napoleonic Wars - through their personalities, the versions of themselves projected in their works, and their literary engagement with contemporary life. However, the strong links between them have never been explored in detail. This pioneering study looks at the two writers' personal relations, from their verbal sparring in Regency social life, through the friendship which developed in Switzerland after Byron left Britain in 1816, to Byron's tributes to Madame de Staël after her death. It concentrates on their literary links, both direct responses to each other's works, and copious evidence of shared concerns. Topics covered include the writers' treatment of gender, their grappling with the possibilities for 'heroic' endeavour, their engagement with the contrasting social and political situations in Britain, France and Italy, and their conception of the writer's role. |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 18
Side 11
... effects of love , plus the high - flown rhetoric with which she often treated the theme , might foster sentimental ... effect on her ideas and creative endeavours.33 Yet one consequence of both her premature death , and the particular ...
... effects of love , plus the high - flown rhetoric with which she often treated the theme , might foster sentimental ... effect on her ideas and creative endeavours.33 Yet one consequence of both her premature death , and the particular ...
Side 64
... effect to the heroines ' vulnerability as women who challenge pervasive notions about their sex . But Staël also shows that it is not only remarkable women who succumb to these : a particularly baneful effect of the constraints on ...
... effect to the heroines ' vulnerability as women who challenge pervasive notions about their sex . But Staël also shows that it is not only remarkable women who succumb to these : a particularly baneful effect of the constraints on ...
Side 192
... effect change for the good . She wrote a defence of Marie Antoinette ( ' Reflections on the Queen's Trial ' ) , which she hoped would help save the Queen's life - but to no avail . On the other hand , she was able to intervene in 1797 ...
... effect change for the good . She wrote a defence of Marie Antoinette ( ' Reflections on the Queen's Trial ' ) , which she hoped would help save the Queen's life - but to no avail . On the other hand , she was able to intervene in 1797 ...
Innhold
Their She Condition | 26 |
Heroines and Heroes | 55 |
Citizens of the World | 96 |
Opphavsrett | |
3 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Lord Byron and Madame De Stal: Born for Opposition Joanne Wilkes Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2020 |
Lord Byron and Madame de Staël: Born for Opposition Joanne Wilkes Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2018 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
admiration affected argued beauty become believed Britain British Byron called canto celebrates Childe Harold claims compared concerned consider contrast Corinne Corinne's culture death Delphine discussed Don Juan emotional English existence experience expressed feelings figure force France freedom French French Revolution Germany given hand heart hence heroes heroine hopes human ideal imagination individual influence intellectual Italian Italy kind Lady later less Letter lines literary literature lives Lord Madame de Staël means mind moral Moreover Napoleon nature never novel offer Oswald particularly passage passion poem poet poetry points political possessed potential present Press readers recall representative response role Romantic Rousseau says sense sexual social society speaker Staël stanza suffering suggest thoughts turn University Venice woman women writers