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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_870763962
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (VI, 332 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9783110486339 , 9783110484984
    Series Statement: Narratologia Volume 55
    Content: Lyric poetry as a temporal art-form makes pervasive use of narrative elements in organizing the progressive course of the poetic text. This observation justifies the application of the advanced methodology of narratology to the systematic analysis of lyric poems. After a concise presentation of this transgeneric approach to poetry, the study sets out to demonstrate its practical fruitfulness in detailed analyses of a large number of English (and some American) poems from the early modern period to the present. The narratological approach proves particularly suited to focus on the hitherto widely neglected dimension of sequentiality, the dynamic progression of the poetic utterance and its eventful turns, which largely constitute the raison d'être of the poem. To facilitate comparisons, the examples chosen share one special thematic complex, the traumatic experience of severe loss: the death of a beloved person, the imminence of one’s own death, the death of a revered fellow-poet and the loss of a fundamental stabilizing order. The function of the poems can be described as facing the traumatic experience in the poetic medium and employing various coping strategies. The poems thus possess a therapeutic impetus.
    Note: Frontmatter -- -- Table of Contents -- -- 1. Introduction -- -- 2. Mourning the Death of a Beloved Person -- -- 2.0. Introduction -- -- 2.1. Ben Jonson: “On My First Daughter” (1593) and “On My First Son” (1603) -- -- 2.2. John Donne: “Since She Whom I Loved” (1617) and John Milton: “Methought I Saw My Late Espoused Saint” (1658) -- -- 2.3. Lord Byron: “Away, Away, Ye Notes of Woe” (1811) and “And Thou art Dead, as Young and Fair” (1812) -- -- 2.4. Edgar Allan Poe: “Lenore” (1844–1849) -- -- 2.5. Seamus Heaney: “Mid-Term Break” (1966) -- -- 2.6. Eavan Boland: “The Blossom” (1998) and “The Pomegranate” (1994) -- -- 2.7. Summary -- -- 3. Coping with Loss in Love -- -- 3.0. Introduction -- -- 3.1. William Shakespeare: The Sonnets (1609) -- -- 3.2. John Donne: “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning” (1633) -- -- 3.3. William Wordsworth: “Lucy Poems” (1800, 1801/1807) -- -- 3.4. Emily Dickinson: “After Great Pain” (ca. 1862) -- -- 3.5. Thomas Hardy: “The Voice” (1912/14) -- -- 3.6. Sylvia Plath: “The Other” (1962) -- -- 3.7. Ted Hughes: Birthday Letters (1998) -- -- 3.8. Summary -- -- 4. Confronting One’s Own Death -- -- 4.0. Introduction -- -- 4.1. Sir Walter Raleigh: “Verses Made the Night before He Died” (1618) and Chidiock Tichborne: “Elegy” (1586) -- -- 4.2. John Donne: “What if this Present were the World’s Last Night” (1609/1611) -- -- 4.3. William Cowper: “The Castaway” (1799/1800) -- -- 4.4. John Keats: “When I have Fears that I May Cease to be” (1818) and Lord Byron: “On this Day I Complete my Thirty-Sixth Year” (1824) -- -- 4.5. Emily Dickinson: “Because I Could not Stop for Death” (ca. 1863) -- -- 4.6. Rupert Brooke: “The Soldier” (1914) and Wilfred Owen: “Strange Meeting” (1918) -- -- 4.7. D. H. Lawrence: “Bavarian Gentians” (1932) -- -- 4.8. Summary -- -- 5. Lamenting the Death of Poets -- -- 5.0. Introduction -- -- 5.1. Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey: “An Excellent Epitaph of Sir Thomas Wyatt” (1542) -- -- 5.2. Thomas Carew: “An Elegy upon the Death of the Dean of Paul’s, Dr John Donne” (1633) -- -- 5.3. Percy Bysshe Shelley: “Adonais: An Elegy on the Death of John Keats” (1821) -- -- 5.4. W. H. Auden: “In Memory of W. B. Yeats” (1939) -- -- 5.5. Seamus Heaney: “Audenesque: in memory of Joseph Brodsky” (1996) -- -- 5.6. Summary -- -- 6. Thematizing the Loss of an Old Order -- -- 6.0. Introduction -- -- 6.1. John Donne: An Anatomy of the World (1611) and William Shakespeare: The Sonnets (1609) -- -- 6.2. William Wordsworth: “The World is too Much with Us” (1807) and W. B. Yeats: “High Talk” (1939) -- -- 6.3. Percy Bysshe Shelley: “Lift not the Painted Veil” (1818/1824) and “The Cloud” (1819/1820) -- -- 6.4. Matthew Arnold: “Dover Beach” (1851) and Gerard Manley Hopkins: “No Worst, there is None” (ca. 1885) -- -- 6.5. T. S. Eliot: The Waste Land (1922) and “Journey of the Magi” (1930) -- -- 6.6. W. B. Yeats: “Lapis Lazuli” (1938) -- -- 6.7. Tony Harrison: “A Kumquat for John Keats” (1981) -- -- 6.8. Summary -- -- 7. Conclusion: Summary and Results -- -- Index (authors and titles) , Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783110484229
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Hühn, Peter, 1939 - Facing loss and death Berlin : De Gruyter, 2016 ISBN 9783110484229
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3110484226
    Additional Edition: Available in another form ISBN 978-3-11-048422-9
    Language: English
    Subjects: English Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: Englisch ; Lyrik ; Verlust ; Psychisches Trauma ; Erzähltechnik ; Geschichte
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
    Author information: Schenk-Haupt, Stefan 1974-
    Author information: Hühn, Peter 1939-
    Author information: Goerke, Britta
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press
    UID:
    gbv_1047715635
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource
    ISBN: 9781316874905
    Series Statement: Cambridge studies in Romanticism
    Content: "Writing to his friend and mentor Charles Cowden Clarke in March of 1817, John Keats asked 'When shall we see each other again? In Heaven or in Hell, or in deep Places? In crooked Lane are we to meet or on Salisbury Plain? Or jumbled together at Drury Lane door?' (Letters 1.126). By way of Macbeth, Keats's joke encompasses a universe of experience-heaven, hell, London's crooked streets, the mythical English countryside, the textual Shakespeare, the performed Shakespeare-all held together conceptually by the notion of the theater. An intrepid playgoer, Keats knew what it was to visit the street carnival of the theater district, to be 'jumbled up' with the crowds making their way down clogged byways to see Edmund Kean's latest impersonation of Shylock or Richard III. There, Keats implies, the metaphysical and the apocalyptic meet the bodily and the everyday on the threshold of the playhouse where his favorite actor reigns. Yet in a sense the letter imagines two Keatses at once: he is an actor parodying Shakespeare's lines even as he is a would-be audience member off to meet a friend. Both aspects give us a glimpse of how vital theatrical experience was to Keats's sense of himself as a social being"--
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 04 Jan 2019)
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781107183872
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Mulrooney, Jonathan, 1969 - Romanticism and theatrical experience Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018 ISBN 9781107183872
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1107183871
    Language: English
    Subjects: General works , English Studies
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Englisch ; Literatur ; Romantik ; Hazlitt, William 1778-1830 ; Keats, John 1795-1821 ; Kean, Edmund 1787-1833 ; Theater ; Großbritannien ; Presse ; Theaterkritik ; Romantik ; Geschichte ; Bibliografie
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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