Sets the literature of 1800-1837 in its social and intellectual context. Includes essays on William Blake - George Crabbe - Robert Burns ; Walter Scott - Jane Austen - Romanticism - John Clare - William Cobbett - William Wordsworth - Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Percy Bysshe Shelley; John Keats - George Byron - Landscape painting
The Victorian social and political scene - Literary scene -Charles Dickens - Thackeray and Trollope - Tennyson - Robert Browning - Bronte sisters - George Eliot - Language and literature in the Victorian period - Matthew Arnold - Gerard Manley Hopkins - Hardy's tales - Aspects of Victorian architecture.
Useful reference for a study of Shakespeare's theatre.; Social setting - Elizabethan Renaissance - Shakespeare and his age - Jacobean tragedy and prose - Spenser and The faerie queen - Sidney - Daniel - Ralegh - Words and music in Elizabethan England - Marlowe - Ben Jonson - Chapman - Middleton
A discussion of the development of English literature from 1660 to 1780 includes examinations of authors, such as Alexander Pope, Daniel Defoe, and Henry Fielding.
This is the ninth volume in the Penguin Guide to Literature, and comprises an account of American literature from its colonial origins to the heterogeneous, distinctive voices of today. The first part of this book, which includes an essay on the relevant social and historical context, takes the reader from James Fenimore Cooper, the first American writer to achieve international status as a novelist, through to the early 20th-century and the works of Henry James and Edith Wharton and includes essays on Hawthorne, Poe, Melville, Twain and Whitman.
Sets the literature of the 17th century in its social and intellectual context. Includes essays on metaphysical and religious poetry - The Caroline poets; The Cavalier poets - John Milton - John Donne - Thomas Browne - Francis Bacon - Ben Jonson - George Herbert and the devotional poets; Christopher Marvell - Thomas Hobbes - John Bunyan - Samuel Butler - John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester - Abraham Cowley.
A brilliant new work that returns Richard Ford to the hallowed territory that sealed his reputation as an American master: the world of Frank Bascombe, and the landscape of his celebrated novels The Sportswriter, the Pulitzer Prize and PEN/Faulkner winning Independence Day, and The Lay of the Land. In his trio of world-acclaimed novels portraying the life of an entire American generation, Richard Ford has imagined one of the most indelible and widely discussed characters in modern literature, Frank Bascombe. Through Bascombe—protean, funny, profane, wise, often inappropriate—we’ve witnessed the aspirations, sorrows, longings, achievements and failings of an American life in the twilight of the twentieth century. Now, in Let Me Be Frank with You, Ford reinvents Bascombe in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. In four richly luminous narratives, Bascombe (and Ford) attempts to reconcile, interpret and console a world undone by calamity. It is a moving and wondrous and extremely funny odyssey through the America we live in at this moment. Ford is here again working with the maturity and brilliance of a writer at the absolute height of his powers.