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. |
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Side 121
... speaker's sense of the remoteness of this lost past ( ' Titanic ' , ' another world ' ) , it is in the next stanza that he declares that Europe's awareness of her cultural debt to Italy will induce her to expel the barbarians . The poem ...
... speaker's sense of the remoteness of this lost past ( ' Titanic ' , ' another world ' ) , it is in the next stanza that he declares that Europe's awareness of her cultural debt to Italy will induce her to expel the barbarians . The poem ...
Side 127
... speaker is able to ' ponder boldly ' . 63 In Childe Harold IV , the first legacy of the speaker's ' all - seeing ' power is his vision of the dying Dacian gladiator , ' Butcher'd to make a Roman holiday ' ( st . 141 ) . It is clearly a ...
... speaker is able to ' ponder boldly ' . 63 In Childe Harold IV , the first legacy of the speaker's ' all - seeing ' power is his vision of the dying Dacian gladiator , ' Butcher'd to make a Roman holiday ' ( st . 141 ) . It is clearly a ...
Side 129
... speaker declares , ... spreads the dim and universal pall Through which all things grow phantoms ; and the cloud Between us sinks and all which ever glow'd , Till Glory's self is twilight , and displays A melancholy halo ... ( st . 165 ) ...
... speaker declares , ... spreads the dim and universal pall Through which all things grow phantoms ; and the cloud Between us sinks and all which ever glow'd , Till Glory's self is twilight , and displays A melancholy halo ... ( st . 165 ) ...
Innhold
Their She Condition | 26 |
Heroines and Heroes | 55 |
Citizens of the World | 96 |
Opphavsrett | |
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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
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