ByronNorthcote House, 2000 - 86 ページ After Shakespeare the most famous British author in Europe, in Britain Byron was for years either neglected, or a victim of the myth of his own personality. Now he is read and studied both for his complex politics and as a forerunner of many of the ideas and techniques more usually associated with post-modernism. Bone tackles the critical problems both of the populism of much of Byron's early work, and conversely of the sophisticated comedy of Beppo, Don Juan and The Vision of Judgement. He argues that for all its contradictoriness Byron's poetic mind develops organically, and that the scintillating technique of the late works grow out of the profoundly modern world-view, relativistic and secular, which had developed through his early years. Byron's writing are seen as a vital area for post-ideological and new found criticism. |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-3 / 14
... period of his life that , unlike the more judicious Hobhouse , he unreservedly took the side of the foreigner with the simple moral case , rather than the British establishment with the more ' sophisticated ' position . This ...
... period . However a sense of the realities of the outside world is never wholly absent . Although the " Sonnet " begins with a ringing affirmation of freedom as a mental state , the essence of which can only be revealed when the physical ...
... period in which Shelley and Byron saw a good deal of each other - Shelley's poem Julian and Maddalo is based on these meetings - and it was now that Byron first announced his work on Don Juan . Two threads remain to be picked up in ...