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This comprehensive guide to the poetry and letters of John Keats offers a highly readable and detailed textual analysis of the themes and techniques of his work. Blades assesses all the major writing - including the narratives and the great odes - and goes on to examine the context of the verse through a survey of the poet's letters and an examination of the key features of nineteenth century Romanticism. This lively and imaginative study concludes with a discussion of some of the most influential critical responses to Keats's work.
Written in an age of revolutions, Lyrical Ballads represents a
radical new way of thinking - not only about literature but also
about our fundamental perceptions of the world. The poetry of
Wordsworth and Coleridge continues to be among the most appealing
and challenging in the rich tradition of English Literature; and
Lyrical Ballads, composed at the height of the young authors'
creative powers, is now widely acclaimed as a landmark in literary
history. In this lively study, detailed analysis of individual
poems is closely grounded in the literary, political and historical
contexts in which Lyrical Ballads was first conceived, realised and
subsequently expanded into two volumes. John Blades examines poetry
from both volumes and carefully reassesses the poems in the light
of Wordsworth's and Coleridge's revolutionary theories, while Part
II of the study broadens the discussion by tracing the critical
history of Lyrical Ballads over the two centuries since its first
publication. Providing students with the critical and analytical
skills with which to approach the poems, and offering guidance on
further study, this stimulating book is essential reading.
The appearance in 1609 of Shakespeare's Sonnets is cloaked in
mystery and controversy, while the poems themselves are
masterpieces of silence and deception. The intervening four
centuries have done little to diminish either their mystique or
their appeal, and recent years have witnessed an upsurge in
interest in these brilliant and contentious lyrics. John Blades'
penetrating study of the Sonnets is a highly lucid introduction to
Shakespeare's subjects and poetic craft, involving detailed
insights on the major themes, together with a comprehensive
exploration of the Rival Poet and Dark Mistress sequences.
Shakespeare: The Sonnets: - draws on an extensive range of sonnets,
offering a line-by-line analysis that engages with the poems as
masterworks in their own right, as well as registering their
relationship with Shakespeare's dramas - locates the Sonnets in
their Elizabethan and humanist framework, with a survey of the
history of the sonnet form and rhetorical conventions within the
context of the early modern period - concludes with a brief
assessment of critical attitudes towards the Sonnets over the four
centuries since their publication and an indepth examination of
four important critics. Providing students with the critical and
analytical skills with which to approach the Sonnets, and featuring
a helpful glossary and suggestions for further study, this
fascinating book is an indispensable guide.
This stimulating study takes a fresh look at Browning's poetry and
at some of the key themes that run through his work. Part I uses
carefully selected extracts for close textual analysis, while Part
II examines Browning's life, contexts and a sample of criticism.
Using some of Browning's most widely studied poems, this book will
develop students' close reading technique and help them to
articulate their own responses to poetry. The volume is an ideal
introductory guide for A Level and undergraduate English Literature
students, or anyone studying Browning's poems for the first time.
This stimulating study takes a fresh look at Browning's poetry and
at some of the key themes that run through his work. Part I uses
carefully selected extracts for close textual analysis, while Part
II examines Browning's life, contexts and a sample of criticism.
Using some of Browning's most widely studied poems, this book will
develop students' close reading technique and help them to
articulate their own responses to poetry. The volume is an ideal
introductory guide for A Level and undergraduate English Literature
students, or anyone studying Browning's poems for the first time.
The History plays established Shakespeare's reputation as an
enormously popular and dramatic storyteller, demonstrating his
skill in drawing such astonishing characters as Richard III and Sir
John Falstaff. Featuring detailed analyses of extracts, John Blades
guides the student through four of Shakespeare's most compelling
Histories. Part I of this stimulating study: - Provides clear and
engaging close readings of passages from Richard II, Henry IV Parts
1 & 2, and Richard III - Examines major themes, characters,
language and Shakespeare's dramatic techniques - Offers suggestions
for further work and summarizes the methods of analysis Part II
supplies essential background material, including: - A detailed
survey of Shakespeare's literary and historical contexts - Samples
of criticism from leading scholars With a helpful Glossary and
Further Reading section, this lucid study is ideal for anyone who
wishes to appreciate and explore the remarkable writing of
Shakespeare's History plays for themselves.
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