Everlasting Voices

Everlasting Voices
Author: Richard J. Thompson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 128
Release: 1989
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

". . . Praise to Professor Thompson for his insights and for his refusal to do what some modern criticism undertakes, make the writers subservient to critical virtuosity. Instead, he conveys a sense of delight in being just a reader though, of course, a quite learned one."The International Fiction Review

Reconstructing Yeats

Reconstructing Yeats
Author: Steven Putzel
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 268
Release: 1986
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780389206002

This book focuses on the two works in the subtitle as well as on unpublished manuscripts and notebooks in the Yeats collection of the National Library of Ireland. The author argues that by the end of the 1890s Yeats had developed a coherent symbolic system based on his work with Irish folklore and mythology and that this system is most clearly delineated in the first editions of the work and in Yeats's unpublished papers. The book begins with a study of Yeats's Irish and Celtic sources, then moves on to outline the symbolic theory, drawing heavily on Yeats's notebooks. The theory is then applied in a critical study of the poems, prose, and plays of the last half of the 1890s.

A Man who Does Not Exist

A Man who Does Not Exist
Author: Deborah Fleming
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 242
Release: 1995
Genre: English literature
ISBN: 9780472105816

A unique perspective on Yeats's and Synge's contributions to the literature of revolutionary Ireland

The Player Queen

The Player Queen
Author: W. B. Yeats
Publisher: Digireads.com Publishing
Total Pages: 32
Release: 2011-01-01
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9781420941692

William Butler Yeats was born near Dublin in 1865, and was encouraged from a young age to pursue a life in the arts. He attended art school for a short while, but soon found that his talents and interest lay in poetry rather than painting. His father's love of reading aloud exposed Yeats early on to William Shakespeare, the Romantic poets and the pre-Raphaelites, and developed an interest in Irish myths and folklore. As a result, he became an instrumental figure in the "Irish Literary Revival" of the 20th Century that redefined Irish writing. In 1899 Yeats helped found the Irish National Theatre Society, which later became the famous Abbey Theatre of Dublin. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1923, and received honorary degrees from Queen's University (Belfast), Trinity College (Dublin), and the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. In this volume we find one of Yeats' lesser-known works, "The Player Queen."

Poems

Poems
Author: W. J. Cameron
Publisher:
Total Pages: 182
Release: 1909
Genre:
ISBN:

The Major Works

The Major Works
Author: William Butler Yeats
Publisher:
Total Pages: 612
Release: 2001
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780192842831

This authoritative edition was first published in the acclaimed Oxford Authors series under the general editorship of Frank Kermode. It brings together a unique combination of Yeats's poetry and prose - all the major poems, complemented by plays, critical writings, and letters - to give theessence of his work and thinking.W. B. Yeats was born in 1865, only 38 years after the death of William Blake, and died in 1939, the contemporary of Ezra Pound and James Joyce. His career crossed two centuries, and this volume represents the full range of his achievement, from the Romantic early poems of Crossways and thesymbolist masterpiece The Wind Among the Reeds to his last poems. Myth and folk-tale influence both his poems and his plays, represented here by Cathleen ni Houlihan and Deirdre among others. The importance of the spirit world to his life and work is evident in his critical essays and occultwritings, and the anthology also contains political speeches, autobiographical writings, and a selection of his letters.This one-volume collection of poems and prose offers a unique perspective on the connectedness of Yeats's literary output, showing how his aesthetic, spiritual, and political development was reflected in everything he wrote.

The Unappeasable Shadow

The Unappeasable Shadow
Author: Adele M. Dalsimer
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 246
Release: 2016-09-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1315449501

Yeats and his shadow are one of the most closely scrutinised pairs in contemporary literary history. The meaning and significance Yeats gave to the entity by which he was constantly pursued and with which he held frequent colloquy have been held under the critical microscope, and the shadow has emerged alternately as the course of human history, the poet’s alter-ego, his inner self, the natural man, or as anything that Yeats wanted but believed himself not to be. This title, first published in 1988, examines the influence that Shelley had on Yeats and this ‘shadow’. The study concentrates primarily on the complex influence of Shelley’s Alastor on Yeats, tracing the problems it suggests and the questions it raises from Yeats’s early, highly imitative poems through the austere, unromantic middle poems to the late poems where Yeats sees himself as the "last of the romantics". This title will be of interest to students of literature.