John Clare and the Bounds of CircumstanceMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 01/10/1987 - 240 páginas The author suggests that the full significance of Clare's contribution to English literature is found not in his social criticism, but in his refusal to dissociate himself from his past or to become assimilated into the mainstream of English culture at the expense of his class-identity. She argues that a clear set of aesthetic principles informs his finest work and provides the first thematic and structural classification of his poetry. Focussing on the major vocational poems and selected passages from the prose, she shows how Clare formulated the creative ideas and rhetorical techniques that allowed him to give unified expression to both his social and literary concerns. Clare's deep involvement with nature and rural England was not only the basis for his poetry, but also enabled him to articulate beliefs which opposed the inhumane values of his time. |
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... importance to English literature . It was the con- descending nature of the interest in his situation , not the ... important to Clare , not only because it had not yet been adequately recorded in literature , but because it carried ...
... importance to English literature . It was the con- descending nature of the interest in his situation , not the ... important to Clare , not only because it had not yet been adequately recorded in literature , but because it carried ...
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... important to his work and what he believed to be essential to all forms of writing , why he felt alienated from the tradition and from his public and how he learned to trust his own creative instincts . These are , one might suppose ...
... important to his work and what he believed to be essential to all forms of writing , why he felt alienated from the tradition and from his public and how he learned to trust his own creative instincts . These are , one might suppose ...
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... important work which allows us to watch a poet - in - the - making , living with and fighting against the limitations of his situation . The struggle was against the circum- stances of his class , not against his class . Though " The ...
... important work which allows us to watch a poet - in - the - making , living with and fighting against the limitations of his situation . The struggle was against the circum- stances of his class , not against his class . Though " The ...
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Índice
3 | |
The Thousands and the Few | 12 |
The Enclosure Elegies | 36 |
3 The Struggle for Acceptance | 56 |
4 The Village Minstrel | 86 |
5 Language and Learning | 112 |
6 Literary Principles | 132 |
The Bird Poems | 164 |
Conclusion | 189 |
A Note on Texts | 195 |
Notes | 197 |
Bibliography | 207 |
Index | 215 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
aesthetic appears argued Autobiography Barrell believed bird poems Bloomfield bluecap Burns Casterton character claim Clare wrote common convey Cowper creative Critical Heritage culture describe dialect-words early enclosure elegies English Eric Robinson experience fact fancy fear feel felt fields genteel georgic green language heart Helpston human Ibid idea identity imagery imagination JCOA John Barrell John Clare Keats landscape landscape art language learned Letters literary live look Lubin Lyrical Lyrical Ballads Mary Mitford mind muse nature nature's Nest never Northamptonshire offered Parish pastoral perception pleasures poesy poet poet's poetic political poverty praise Prose question Radstock readers red fallow robin Round-Oak Waters rural labouring poor sense shepherd Shepherd's Calendar sing social society solitude speak stanzas suggest that Clare thee theme things thought Tibble tion tone tradition uneducated values Village Minstrel vocational poems vulgar Wallace Stevens wild words Wordsworth working-class writing