Browning's Experiments with Genre Browning's Experiments with Genre

Browning's Experiments with Genre

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Descrizione dell’editore

One of the chief characteristics of nineteenth-century poetics was a tendency to test the conventions and techniques of literary genres by shifting, modifying, and combining various styles and forms. Browning fully exploited these changes, because his interests and purposes as a poet seemed to demand more of the lyric, the dramatic, and the narrative than these kinds had traditionally been able to perform. His fascination was with the development of the individual soul and he was determined to evoke in his readers his own insights into the complexity of human concerns; thus he became a constant experimenter with genre. Browning never felt that any experiment, however unsatisfactory the result, was wasted effort; each direction tried made him better prepared to attempt another.

This book explores the kinds and modes with which he worked and describes the nature of the experiments he made, concentrating on the earlier poetry and in particular on The Ring and the Book. Professor Hair is sensitive to Browning's work, and his criticism is a model of understanding, warm appreciation, and critical good sense.

GENERE
Narrativa e letteratura
PUBBLICATO
1972
15 dicembre
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
339
EDITORE
University of Toronto Press, Scholarly Publishing Division
DIMENSIONE
911,8
KB

Altri libri di Donald S. Hair

Robert Browning's Language Robert Browning's Language
1999
Domestic and Heroic in Tennyson's Poetry Domestic and Heroic in Tennyson's Poetry
1981
Tennyson's Language Tennyson's Language
1991