Knihobot

Adrian Kempton

    1. leden 1946
    The epistolary muse
    Poetry in the novel
    The verse novel in English
    The Mind's Isle
    • The Mind's Isle

      • 382 stránek
      • 14 hodin čtení
      3,0(1)Ohodnotit

      Islands have always attracted travellers, writers and dreamers. This book investigates exactly what lies behind the island's powerful appeal to the English literary imagination, discussing classics such as Utopia, The Tempest, Robinson Crusoe, Gulliver's Travels, Treasure Island and Lord of the Flies.

      The Mind's Isle
    • The verse novel in English

      • 348 stránek
      • 13 hodin čtení

      This study analyses the manner in which poets from the nineteenth century to the present day have adopted novelistic genres and techniques and adapted these to the prosodic requirements of rhyming, blank and free verse in order to produce original literary blends.

      The verse novel in English
    • Poetry in the novel

      • 314 stránek
      • 11 hodin čtení

      This study examines the different ways in which novelists have incorporated poetry into the fabric of their fictions. It works against literary compartmentalization by revealing how poetry can enhance prose narrative and how the novel can bring poetry to the notice of a wider reading public.

      Poetry in the novel
    • The epistolary muse

      • 348 stránek
      • 13 hodin čtení

      Epistolary fiction was in full flower during the period from 1652 to 1802, featuring the masterworks of Guilleragues, Richardson, Rousseau and Laclos. This study traces the development of the art of letter-writing and familiar correspondence and its adaptation by women writers into a remarkable range of literary genres, both fictional and non-fictional. In addition to the better known categories of the monodic love-letter sequence and the polyphonic epistolary novel, these sub-genres include letter miscellanies, essays, travelogues, educational novels and verse epistles. To all these, women writers made a valuable, and sometimes totally original, contribution. Indeed, it could be said that it was essentially through letter-writing that women achieved literary recognition. This volume examines each of these epistolary categories in turn, revealing how women writers from either country excelled in a particular genre: the French, for example, in the epistolary monody and fictional foreign correspondence, the English in the miscellany and verse epistle, and both in the polyphonic letter-novel. Finally, the study notes how, despite the rapid decline of epistolary fiction in the nineteenth century, a select number of letter-novels by American, English and French women writers still continue to be published.

      The epistolary muse