Reading, Writing, and Romanticism: The Anxiety of ReceptionOxford University Press, 2003 - 397 oldal Reading, Writing, and Romanticism bridges a perceived gulf between materialist and idealist approaches to the reader. Informed by an historical awareness of Romantic hermeneutics and its later developments (as well as by an understanding of the circumstances conditioning the production and consumption of literature in this period), the book examines how readers are imagined, addressed, figured and theorized in Romantic poetry and criticism (1790-1830). Models of canon-formation, intertextuality and reader-response are considered alongside the existence of reading-coteries, the social practices of reading, and reforms in copyright. Consideration is given to the philosophical and ideological influences which bear upon the status of reading at this time, as well as to the educational theories and practices which underpin reading habits. Non-canonical writers are included, and special attention is given to the emergence of women's poetry and its repercussions for the poetics of reception. |
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xvi. oldal
... Question of Secondariness 173 II . Hunt's Dialogic Method 179 III . Poetry - Prose Dialogue and Parody 186 IV . Peacock : The Motives of Equivocation 194 V. Hazlitt and the Defence of Criticism 202 VI . Lamb's Defence of Reading 208 VII ...
... Question of Secondariness 173 II . Hunt's Dialogic Method 179 III . Poetry - Prose Dialogue and Parody 186 IV . Peacock : The Motives of Equivocation 194 V. Hazlitt and the Defence of Criticism 202 VI . Lamb's Defence of Reading 208 VII ...
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Tartalomjegyzék
THE SENSE OF AN AUDIENCE | 3 |
Authorship and the Public Sphere | 13 |
Reputation | 30 |
Reading Consumption | 39 |
COLERIDGE | 49 |
WORDSWORTH | 91 |
Ballads 1800 | 117 |
An Epitaphic | 124 |
Jewsbury Hemans and Landon | 251 |
DEFENCES | 263 |
Copyright and the Paradox of Romantic Authorship | 269 |
CanonFormation Connectiveness and Recuperation | 289 |
REPETITION | 298 |
Hermeneutic | 311 |
Women Readers and the Dangers of Sympathetic | 317 |
AN AMBIGUOUS | 333 |
ANNA BARBAULD | 134 |
Interventions and Trespasses | 145 |
COMPETITION AND COLLABORATION | 173 |
Envy Irony and the Rivalry of Genres | 215 |
FEMINIZING THE POETICS OF RECEPTION | 224 |
From Sheridan to Thelwall | 339 |
372 | |
391 | |
Más kiadások - Összes megtekintése
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
addressed aesthetic Anna Letitia Barbauld anonymous anxiety of reception argued audience Barbauld become Biographia Cambridge claims Coleridge Coleridge's contemporary creative criticism culture defence discourse Dorothy Dorothy Wordsworth echo Edinburgh Review essay fame fear feelings female feminine figure friends gender genius genre Hazlitt Henry Crabb Robinson hermeneutic hierarchy of genres Ibid ideal identity ideology imagination implications John Keats Kubla Khan Lamb language Lectures letter literary literature London Lyrical Ballads Mary Shelley Mary Wollstonecraft masculine metaphor Milton mind narrative novels Oxford parodist parody Peacock periodical Peter Bell poem poem's poet poet's poetics of reception poetry political Preface Priestley Priestley's published Quincey quoted readers reading-public respect reviewers rhetoric role Romantic Romanticism satire sense spirit status style sublime suggests sympathetic identification sympathy taste theory tion Tom Paulin tradition University Press verse voice Warrington Academy Wollstonecraft woman women writers words Wordsworth Prose writing-reading