Local Attachments: The Province of Poetry
Autor Fiona Stafforden Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 sep 2010
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199558162
ISBN-10: 0199558167
Pagini: 366
Dimensiuni: 144 x 222 x 35 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0199558167
Pagini: 366
Dimensiuni: 144 x 222 x 35 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Local Attachments makes for an elegant defence of Romantic provincialism.
Fiona Stafford's sharp senses which freshly illuminate even such familar poems as Wordsworth's "Immortality" Ode and Burns's "Banks and Braes".
There is admirable ease and clarity in the way Stafford summarises larger historical and philosophical shifts in order to contextualise poetic position, making the book highly accessible... it provides a clear, thorough and highly readable account of the value of familiar places for major Romantic writers
This humane and eloquently written book presents an attachment to locality as the ground for truthfulness in British Romantic poetry.
Fiona Stafford's sharp senses which freshly illuminate even such familar poems as Wordsworth's "Immortality" Ode and Burns's "Banks and Braes".
There is admirable ease and clarity in the way Stafford summarises larger historical and philosophical shifts in order to contextualise poetic position, making the book highly accessible... it provides a clear, thorough and highly readable account of the value of familiar places for major Romantic writers
This humane and eloquently written book presents an attachment to locality as the ground for truthfulness in British Romantic poetry.
Notă biografică
Fiona Stafford travelled widely as a child until her family settled in Lincolnshire. She studied English at Leicester University before undertaking post-graduate research in Oxford. While finishing her D.Phil on Macpherson's Ossian, she worked as a lecturer at the University of Evansville's British Campus and then returned to Oxford to take up a British Academy Post-doctoral Fellowship at Lincoln College. She was a lecturer at the University of Northampton and St Anne's College, Oxford, before becoming a Fellow of Somerville College in 1992. She has been a Professor of English Language and Literature in the University of Oxford since 2008. Her interests include eighteenth and nineteenth-century literature, especially the Romantic period; contemporary poetry; Scottish literature; the literature of the four nations and relations between them; Austen.