'The outcome of a lifelong engagement with Byron's poetry, Richard Cronin has written perhaps the best critical appraisal of 'Don Juan' that one could wish for.' Philip Shaw, The Charles and Mary Lamb Journal

In this first full-length study of Byron's masterpiece in over thirty years, Richard Cronin boldly presents Don Juan as the epic poem of its age. Impressively illuminating the whole literary nineteenth century through a single work, he asks what kind of epic can be said to represent an era more readily defined by newspapers and magazines than by competitors such as Wordsworth's Excursion or Southey's Joan of Arc arose. Delving into questions of form and choice of hero, he also explores the controversies that informed the poem's reception, its contemporary interactions, and its influence on later nineteenth-century literature. Don Juan, he argues, is the epic poem demanded by an age of cant and dissembling, when people's feelings and the world they lived in had become disconnected. In it, he finds a powerful defence of liberal thinking at a time when that kind of thinking was under threat.
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Introduction; 1. My poem's epic; 2. I want a hero; 3. Especially upon a printed page; 4. The gate of life and death; 5. Allusions private and inglorious; 6. Taking another tack; 7. Mine irregularity of chime; 8. This is a liberal age.
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Richard Cronin makes the case for why Byron's masterpiece must be recognised as the exemplary epic of the nineteenth century.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781009366236
Publisert
2023-06-29
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge University Press
Vekt
520 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
158 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
260

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Richard Cronin taught for more than forty years at the University of Glasgow. His first monograph was Shelley's Poetic Thoughts (1981), and his most recent are Romantic Victorians: English Literature, 1824-1840 (2002), Paper Pellets: British Literary Culture after Waterloo (2010), Reading Victorian Poetry (2011), and George Meredith: The Life and Writing of an Alteregoist (2019). He co-edited Emma for the Cambridge Edition of the Works of Jane Austen (2005), Robert Browning for 21st-Century Oxford Authors (2014), and A Companion to Victorian Poetry (2002). This is his ninth monograph.