George Crabbe: A ReappraisalThe second section of the book reopens the discussion of Crabbe's work from a set of slightly altered perspectives. Thus one chapter is concerned with the work of the first generation of Romantic poets (Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Southey) and suggests that some of the energy and tension of Crabbe's mature poetry comes from his readiness to expose himself, sensitively yet not uncritically, to the new currents of feeling that were stirring in England around the turn of the century. Other chapters deal with the question of genre, with the claim that Crabbe's determinate meanings (often thought to be peculiarly translucent) can be reduced to indeterminacy by a deconstructive approach, and with the extent to which "ideology" governed his social and political outlook. A concluding chapter takes as its perspective the attempt to set Crabbe's total oeuvre in the context of what we know about his life and personality. |
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... give them their endur- ing value and appeal . A further chapter records the gradual decline of Crabbe's powers as manifested in his two final vol- umes . Tales of the Hall and Posthu- mous Tales . The second section of the book re ...
... give them their endur- ing value and appeal . A further chapter records the gradual decline of Crabbe's powers as manifested in his two final vol- umes . Tales of the Hall and Posthu- mous Tales . The second section of the book re ...
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... give them their enduring value and appeal . A further chapter records the gradual decline of his powers as manifested in his two final volumes , Tales of the Hall and Posthumous Tales . The second section of the book reopens its subject ...
... give them their enduring value and appeal . A further chapter records the gradual decline of his powers as manifested in his two final volumes , Tales of the Hall and Posthumous Tales . The second section of the book reopens its subject ...
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Contents
7 | |
The Last Augustan? | 15 |
Traditional Influences | 27 |
Immediate Precursors | 36 |
The Tale in Embryo | 47 |
Further Narrative Development | 67 |
Tales 1812 | 89 |
Tales of the Hall | 119 |
Crabbe and Genre | 156 |
Crabbe Realism | 163 |
Crabbe and Indeterminacy | 179 |
Crabbe and Ideology | 188 |
Biographical Speculations | 209 |
Afterword | 219 |
Select Bibliography | 236 |
Crabbes VerseTales and Romanticism | 135 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abrams achievement Aldborough Arabella Augustan Borough brother century chapter character sketch characteristic characterization Christian Clelia Coleridge concern context contrast Crabbe's Poetry critical daughter death detail didacticism doubt earlier Eclogues edition eighteenth eighteenth-century English evidence experience faith father feelings follows genre George Crabbe Hall heroic couplet human husband Ian Watt instance Jachin Jane Austen kind Lady later letter lines literary live London lover Lucy Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams madness Maid's Story marriage married ment Miller's mind moral Muston nature Nevertheless novel Parish Register particular passage perhaps Peter Grimes poem poet poet's poetic poor portrayal present Press published reader realism reality reason River Alde Robin Gray Romantic scene seems seen sense social Southey spirit story suggest tale telling theme thought tion tive tone tradition verse verse-tales Village volume Widow wife Wordsworth writing young
References to this book
Romanticism: An Anthology: with CD-ROM, Second Edition Duncan Wu,David S. Miall No preview available - 2000 |