An Introduction to Gray and Goldsmith

An Introduction to Gray and Goldsmith
Author: Thomas Gray
Publisher: EDUCatt - Ente per il diritto allo studio universitario dell'Università Cattolica
Total Pages: 124
Release: 2014-07-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 8867804685

Poetry and British Nationalisms in the Bardic Eighteenth Century

Poetry and British Nationalisms in the Bardic Eighteenth Century
Author: Jeff Strabone
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2018-10-26
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3319952552

This book offers a radical new theory of the role of poetry in the rise of cultural nationalism. With equal attention to England, Scotland, and Wales, the book takes an Archipelagic approach to the study of poetics, print media, and medievalism in the rise of British Romanticism. It tells the story of how poets and antiquarian editors in the British nations rediscovered forgotten archaic poetic texts and repurposed them as the foundation of a new concept of the nation, now imagined as a primarily cultural formation. It also draws on legal and ecclesiastical history in drawing a sharp contrast between early modern and Romantic antiquarianisms. Equally a work of literary criticism and history, the book offers provocative new theorizations of nationalism and Romanticism and new readings of major British poets, including Allan Ramsay, Thomas Gray, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

1730-1784

1730-1784
Author: Charles Wells Moulton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 806
Release: 1902
Genre:
ISBN:

The Barbarian North in Medieval Imagination

The Barbarian North in Medieval Imagination
Author: Robert Rix
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2014-11-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1317589688

This book examines the sustained interest in legends of the pagan and peripheral North, tracing and analyzing the use of an ‘out-of-Scandinavia’ legend (Scandinavia as an ancestral homeland) in a wide range of medieval texts from all over Europe, with a focus on the Anglo-Saxon tradition. The pagan North was an imaginative region, which attracted a number of conflicting interpretations. To Christian Europe, the pagan North was an abject Other, but it also symbolized a place from which ancestral strength and energy derived. Rix maps how these discourses informed ‘national’ legends of ancestral origins, showing how an ‘out-of-Scandinavia’ legend can be found in works by several familiar writers including Jordanes, Bede, ‘Fredegar’, Paul the Deacon, Freculph, and Æthelweard. The book investigates how legends of northern warriors were first created in classical texts and since re-calibrated to fit different medieval understandings of identity and ethnicity. Among other things, the ‘out-of-Scandinavia’ tale was exploited to promote a legacy of ‘barbarian’ vigor that could withstand the negative cultural effects of Roman civilization. This volume employs a variety of perspectives cutting across the disciplines of poetry, history, rhetoric, linguistics, and archaeology. After years of intense critical interest in medieval attitudes towards the classical world, Africa, and the East, this first book-length study of ‘the North’ will inspire new debates and repositionings in medieval studies.