Teaching Eighteenth-century PoetryChristopher Fox AMS Press, 1990 - 435 sider Aside from the fact that the various periods of English literature were devised at a time - the 19th century - most hostile to 18th-century poetry, this poetry also has suffered, on occasion, from the way it is taught, particularly in undergraduate survey courses. This volume addresses this problem by providing a handbook on the subject, not conceived as a generalized and anecdotal survey of teaching, but one which approaches specific problems and specific poems. |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 54
Side 106
... passage tangled and difficult . The opening " One " is intimidating right off ; and the explanatory term " wretch " hardly improves things . Only in the third line , with the term " actors , " can Donne's readers , by making an ...
... passage tangled and difficult . The opening " One " is intimidating right off ; and the explanatory term " wretch " hardly improves things . Only in the third line , with the term " actors , " can Donne's readers , by making an ...
Side 111
... passage ends , being easy in a different way , also qualify as " natural . " The fact that the passage presents no information about the actual state of " this Paradise " that might correspond to that so insistently stated about the ...
... passage ends , being easy in a different way , also qualify as " natural . " The fact that the passage presents no information about the actual state of " this Paradise " that might correspond to that so insistently stated about the ...
Side 202
... passage suggests ( What sort of state could treat succession so casually ? -- matter for consideration there , touching on the devel- opment of England's peculiar constitution ) , or because of certain latent energies in the passage ...
... passage suggests ( What sort of state could treat succession so casually ? -- matter for consideration there , touching on the devel- opment of England's peculiar constitution ) , or because of certain latent energies in the passage ...
Indhold
The Examples of Watts | 1 |
Teaching EighteenthCentury Satire | 25 |
Teaching and Parody in EighteenthCentury Poetry | 47 |
Copyright | |
20 andre sektioner vises ikke
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Abelard Absalom and Achitophel Alexander Pope allusion Aphra Behn Arbuthnot Artemisia Augustan Behn Behn's biblical Blake Blake's canon century Collins context Countess of Winchilsea couplet critical cultural David discussion divine Dryden Dunciad eighteenth eighteenth-century poetry Elegy Elizabeth Singer Rowe Eloisa Eloisa to Abelard English Epistle Essay example experience female genre georgic Gray Gray's Heaven Horace Human Wishes ideas imagery imagination imitation Innocence John John Dryden Johnson Jonathan Swift language lines literary literature Lock London Mac Flecknoe Marriage memory metaphor Milton mind modern Muse natural description numbers Oldham Oxford parody passage past pastoral Pindaric poem poem's poet poet's poetic political Pope's prophetic question Rape readers Rochester's Samuel Johnson satire satirist sense sexual Songs soul speaker Sporus stanza suggest Swift's teacher teaching texts thee tion tradition uncanonical understanding University Press Vanity of Human verse vision voice Weinbrot women writing York
Henvisninger til denne bog
Reason and Its Others: Italy, Spain, and the New World David R. Castillo,Massimo Lollini Begrænset visning - 2006 |