John Keats
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Stack | 821 EVE/J (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 32164 |
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820.9994 FAC Fact & fiction: readings in Australian literature | 821 BRO/G Gerard Manley Hopkins | 821 CRA/M The modern poet: poetry, academia, and knowledge since the 1750's | 821 EVE/J John Keats | 821 HAM/P Percy Bysshe Shelley | 821 LAR/W W.B. Yeats | 821 POE Poem of this century: an abridged version |
This book presents an evaluative critical account of all of keats’s important poetry. The arrangement is chronological, and the development of keats’s style and thematic preoccupations is set in the context of the unfolding of his brief but intense personal life. The ambition is to present the intelligent reader, who is relatively new to the study of Keats, with an informative guide which includes discussion of all of the principal events and contexts in which Keats is read today. The book argues that Keats was a writer deeply concerned with history, in the social and political sense, but also in the senses of personal and literary development. In contrast however, with the Main emphasis of much recent criticism, the argument here is that keats's engagement with history took the characteristic form of an effort to represent modes of experience outside history, and indeed outside time itself.
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