This is the first book to bring perspectives from the interdisciplinary field of Peace Studies to bear on the writing of the Romantic period. Particularly significant is that field's attention not only to the work of anti-war protest, but more purposefully to considerations of how peace can actively be fostered, established, and sustained. Bravely resisting discourses of military propaganda, writers such as Amelia Opie, Helen Maria Williams, William Wordsworth, William Cobbett, John Keats, and Jane Austen embarked on the challenging and urgent rhetorical work of imagining--and inspiring others to imagine--the possibility of peace. The writers formulate a peace imaginary in various registers. Sometimes this means identifying and eschewing traditional militaristic tropes in order to craft alternative images for a patriotism compatible with peace. Other times it means turning away from xenophobic discourse to write about relations with other nations in terms other than those of conflict. If historically informed literary criticism has illustrated the importance of writing about war during the Romantic period, this volume invites readers to redirect critical attention to move beyond discourses of war, and to recognize the era's complex and vibrant writing about and for peace.
维吉尼亚·吴尔夫(1882-1941),英国女作家
What constitutes reading? This is the question William McKelvy asks in The English Cult of Literature. Is it a theory of interpretation or a physical activity, a process determined by hermeneutic destiny or by paper, ink, hands, and eyes?
Romantic Regionalism, Romantic Nationalism
She was later to marry another editor, Alec Bolton, who became Publisher to the National Library of Australia. They had a daughter and two sons. The title poem of Dobson's second collection, The Ship of Ice, won The Sydney Morning ...
Arranged alongside related materials drawn from across the Rare Book Collection, these diverse Wordsworth volumes illuminate the physical and cultural landscape of England in the nineteenth century, highlighting the conditions that ...
The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The first detailed reference and critical guide to Anglo-Jewish writing.
For Beaufort's 'The forthe boke' we reprint Pynson 's 1517 edition (STC 23957). ... Denis de Leeuwis, and Jacobus de Gruitroedius, but probably written, as S. Powell says, by the latter, also known as Jacques de Gruytrode. a Carthusian, ...
... a polarization that enables Edward Said to detail the massive and diffuse spectrum of discursive power controlled by the colonizer , and that gives Frantz Fanon a powerful terminology in which to advocate revolutionary struggle .
Treis epi treis