000 01435cam a2200169ua 4500
020 _a9788126913091
082 _a821
_bWOO/R
100 0 _aWoolford, John
245 1 0 _aRobert Browning
260 _aNew Delhi
_bAtlantic
_c2010
300 _a106p.
490 0 _aWriters and their Work
520 _aBrowning is now widely regarded as the nineteenth century's great poet of human psychology, but commentators in his own time defined him rather as a poet of 'the grotesque'. In this study John Woolford undertakes to translate this term by positioning Browning in a major aesthetic tradition running from the Romantic sublime through to modern theorizations of the grotesque such as Bakhtin's. This perspective offers new insights into Browning's most famous and significant generic contribution, the dramatic monologue, as well as explaining features of his poetic language such as his ludic experiments and his notorious linguistic difficulty. Woolford argues persuasively that the difficulty is something that can now be celebrated, rather than deplored or excused. Browning was perhaps the cleverest English poet, but he was also more than that: contemporaries' comparisons of his human curiosity and penetration to that of Chaucer, or Shakespeare, were not misplaced. All were masters of what Chesterton called 'the serious grotesque'.
650 0 _aEnglish literature-Poetry-Poems
650 0 _aRobert Browning
942 _cBK
999 _c29727
_d29727