Spelling suggestions: "subject:"hopkins, gerard manley (184421889)."" "subject:"hopkins, gerard manley (184411889).""
21 |
An enduring spirit of the Victorian Era of DoubtDonaldson, Jennifer 30 November 2003 (has links)
The focus of this study is upon Gerard Manley Hopkins~s literary opinions
about the state of affairs of Victorian England regarding its defence,
religions, science, politics, the economy, and other concerns. His claim to a
legitimate voice lies in the tremendous amount of erudite knowledge he
accumulated over the years, on many different subjects, and his classical
education. Major focus is on his pristine awareness of the Anglo-Saxons
and their language of Old English. Hopkins's unique style of writing poetry
and his contribution to Victorian philology is highlighted. The work also
deals, in some degree, with his mental state at various periods in his life, and
attempts to disclose an overcoming of the anguish and depression evident in
the poems. His enduring spirit under the grave swamping of Christianity by
destructive discourses is another major theme. / ENGLISH STUDIES / M.A. (ENGLISH)
|
22 |
A deeper "Well of English undefyled" : the role and influence of Anglo-Saxon in nineteenth- and twentieth-century poetry : with particular reference to Hopkins, Pound and AudenJones, Chris January 2002 (has links)
This thesis challenges the assumption that Chaucer is the father of the living English poetic tradition. Nobody would deny that poetry existed in a form of English before the fourteenth century, but it is commonly assumed that linguistic and cultural changes have made Anglo-Saxon poetry a specialist area of concern, of no use or interest to modern poets. It is demonstrated that during the nineteenth century, advances in linguistic and textual scholarship made Anglo-Saxon poetry more widely available than had been the case, probably since the Anglo-Norman period. Knowledge of Anglo-Saxon literature is subsequently communicated to poets, particularly after the subject is institutionalized in English departments at British and American universities. Chapter One charts this rise in awareness of Anglo-Saxon poetry and considers its effects on several nineteenth-century poets (William Barnes, Henry Longfellow, Alfred Tennyson and William Morris). Major studies then follow of Gerard Hopkins, Ezra Pound and W. H. Auden and the uses that they make of Anglo-Saxon in their own poetry. It is argued that through these writers Anglo-Saxon has had a more important impact on modern poetry than has been thought previously. Moreover, Anglo-Saxon is often included as part of a poetics that might be called 'modernist'. For each of the three poets under study, the nature of their contact with Anglo-Saxon poetry is determined from documentary evidence (whether at university, or via secondary literature), and different stylistic debts are examined by close readings of a number of poems. No previous work has attempted a detailed analysis of the uses to which these three writers put Anglo-Saxon poetry. This thesis offers such an analysis and synthesizes the different approaches to Anglo-Saxon in order to provide an overview of this phenomenon in nineteenth- and twentieth-century poetry.
|
23 |
The religious crisis in the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins.Giles, Roy James 31 January 2003 (has links)
Gerard Manley Hopkins produced poetry in the Victorian era which was noted for its originality of syntax and form. The essence underlying a large body of his poetry was his Catholic religion. His early religious poetry utilized nature-based metaphors to express his love of Christ and trace the immanence of God within nature. He borrowed heavily from the aesthetics of Pater and the philosophy of Duns Scotus. The dissertation explores these early influences and assesses their contribution to the formation of a unique religious interpretation of life and the formulation of an aesthetic congruent with this religion. The dissertation dissects early symptoms of religious doubt within his poetry and finally analyses his `Terrible Sonnet' phase in detail to ascertain whether the crisis so often described as occurring during this period was religious or merely reflected a loss of creative ability. / English Studies / MA (English)
|
24 |
The Fall Into ModernityDouglas, Nigel Charles 05 1900 (has links)
Permission from the author to digitize this work is pending. Please contact the ICS library if you would like to view this work.
|
25 |
The religious crisis in the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins.Giles, Roy James 31 January 2003 (has links)
Gerard Manley Hopkins produced poetry in the Victorian era which was noted for its originality of syntax and form. The essence underlying a large body of his poetry was his Catholic religion. His early religious poetry utilized nature-based metaphors to express his love of Christ and trace the immanence of God within nature. He borrowed heavily from the aesthetics of Pater and the philosophy of Duns Scotus. The dissertation explores these early influences and assesses their contribution to the formation of a unique religious interpretation of life and the formulation of an aesthetic congruent with this religion. The dissertation dissects early symptoms of religious doubt within his poetry and finally analyses his `Terrible Sonnet' phase in detail to ascertain whether the crisis so often described as occurring during this period was religious or merely reflected a loss of creative ability. / English Studies / MA (English)
|
Page generated in 0.0601 seconds