Storied Cities: Literary Imaginings of Florence, Venice, and Rome
The analysis points to Florence frequently being depicted in terms of binary oppositions, including Hebraism versus Hellenism, past versus present, stasis versus movement, and light versus darkness. Venetian narratives are commonly infused with motifs relating to dream and unreality, obsession, voyeurism, isolation, melancholia, and death. History is a controlling metaphor for Roman fiction and poetry, combined with the motif of change and, especially, fall from innocence to experience. Ross shows how writers have self-consciously built on the literary conventions set earlier and anticipates that these cities will remain natural loci for continued post-modernist experiment. In a wider theoretical framework, he examines this writing identified with place for the light it sheds on the issue of the importance of setting in literature. |
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I have a strong sense of place , and this one ( the English West Country ) gave off all the right vibrations , which struck answering chords deep in my imagination . Whenever I go to a place and this starts happening , it is as though I ...
( 4.18 ) In Canto Four of Byron's poem , the poetic imagination provides the one possible stay against time's universal deluge . Venice becomes there the imagination's symbolic capital , a magic breakwater against the relentless ...
It is the expansive , humanizing magic worked by Rome on Isabel's imagination that sets in perspective her other , equally Roman experience of stifling enclosure . Affecting her sense of time as well as space , the influence of Rome ...
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Tartalomjegyzék
A Tale of Three Cities | 1 |
The Etrurian Athens | 17 |
Robert Brownings Dialectical City | 29 |
Copyright | |
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