Inventing Our Selves

Inventing Our Selves
Author: Nikolas Rose
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 240
Release: 1998-12-28
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780521646079

Inventing Our Selves radically approaches the regime of the self and the values that animate it.

Report

Report
Author: State Library of Massachusetts
Publisher:
Total Pages: 224
Release: 1905
Genre: Libraries
ISBN:

The Trials of Laura Fair

The Trials of Laura Fair
Author: Carole Haber
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 326
Release: 2013
Genre: History
ISBN: 1469607581

Trials of Laura Fair: Sex, Murder, and Insanity in the Victorian West

America, History and Life

America, History and Life
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 704
Release: 2004
Genre: Canada
ISBN:

Article abstracts and citations of reviews and dissertations covering the United States and Canada.

Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital

Bulletin of the Johns Hopkins Hospital
Author: Johns Hopkins Hospital
Publisher:
Total Pages: 474
Release: 1919
Genre: Medicine
ISBN:

Bound with v. 52-55, 1933-34, is the hospital's supplement: Bulletin of the Institute of the History of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, v. 1-2.

The Perversity of Poetry

The Perversity of Poetry
Author: Dino Franco Felluga
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 221
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0791483975

Once the dominant literary form, poetry was gradually eclipsed by the realist novel; indeed, by 1940 W. H. Auden was able to note, "Poetry makes nothing happen." In The Perversity of Poetry, Dino Franco Felluga explores the cultural background of poetry's marginalization by examining nineteenth-century reactions to Romantic poetry and ideology. Focusing on the work of Sir Walter Scott and Lord Byron, as well as periodical reviews, student manuals, and contemporary medical journals, the book details the period's two contending (and equally outrageous) claims regarding poetry. Scott's poetry, on the one hand, was continually represented as a panacea for a modern world overtaken by new principles of utilitarianism, capitalism, industrialism, and democracy. Byron's, by contrast, was represented either as a cancer in the heart of the social order or as a contagious pandemic leading to various pathological symptoms. The book concludes with a coda on Alfred Lord Tennyson, which illustrates how the Victorian reception of Scott and Byron affected the most popular poetic genius of midcentury. Ultimately, The Perversity of Poetry uncovers how the shift to a rhetoric of health allowed critics to oppose what they perceived as a potent and potentially dangerous influence on the age, the very thing that would over the course of the century be marginalized into such obscurity: poetry, thanks to its perverse insistence on making something happen.