Pope: New ContextsDavid Fairer Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1990 - 251 Seiten |
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Seite 107
... desire . Female lack of character , woman's supposed ability to metamorphose herself into countless shapes , becomes a statement of desire . If it is the man , the father , lover or husband who rightly imposes form and identity on ...
... desire . Female lack of character , woman's supposed ability to metamorphose herself into countless shapes , becomes a statement of desire . If it is the man , the father , lover or husband who rightly imposes form and identity on ...
Seite 125
... desire , ' the struggles of grace and nature , virtue and passion ' as Pope's ' Argument ' has it . ' In the poem itself , ' their unfortunate passion ' becomes ' those restless passions ' ( 82 ) , a dialectic of part and whole , vacuum ...
... desire , ' the struggles of grace and nature , virtue and passion ' as Pope's ' Argument ' has it . ' In the poem itself , ' their unfortunate passion ' becomes ' those restless passions ' ( 82 ) , a dialectic of part and whole , vacuum ...
Seite 130
... desire rather than the object of desire . Hence even good critics of the poetry miss the point in insisting that the poem reveals or creates Eloisa's ' character ' . There can be no such insistence about Abelard , who exists explicitly ...
... desire rather than the object of desire . Hence even good critics of the poetry miss the point in insisting that the poem reveals or creates Eloisa's ' character ' . There can be no such insistence about Abelard , who exists explicitly ...
Inhalt
Pope and the Patriots Christine Gerrard | 25 |
Pope and the idea | 45 |
Belinda Bays and epic effeminacy | 59 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Addison Alexander Pope argue Augustan authority becomes Belinda Blake Blake's Bolingbroke century character Cibber Cobham Coleridge context contradiction couplet court criticism cultural discourse distinction Dryden Dulness dunces Dunciad edited effeminacy eighteenth eighteenth-century Eloisa to Abelard English epic Epistle epitaph Essay example father female feminine Frederick genius George Lyttelton Hanoverian Heraclitus hero heroic Homer Horace Howard Erskine-Hill human idea ideal identity ideology Iliad imagination Imitation J. H. Plumb Jacobitism John language laureate Leopold Damrosch letter literary literature Lock London Lyttelton masculine masquerade metaphor Milton misogyny moral nature Odyssey opposition Paradise Lost passage passion Patriot Phaeacians poem poet poetic political Pope's poetry Popeian Prelude Prince prose Queen Quincey Rape reader revolution rhetoric Romantic satire Scriblerian sense sexual Sherburn social Spectator Stuart suggests Swift things thought Tory tradition translation University verse voice vols Oxford Walpole Whig William William Wordsworth Windsor-Forest woman women words Wordsworth writing