Spelling suggestions: "subject:"rudyard"" "subject:"ledyard""
11 |
Limits and renewals : transformations of belief in Kipling's fictionKemp, Sandra Dawn January 1985 (has links)
No description available.
|
12 |
Kipling's "Law" : a study of his philosophy of life.Shamsul Islam, 1942- January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
|
13 |
Warriors and administrators of the Raj in Kipling's shorter fiction : humanist variations on an imperial theme.Coles, Jennifer. January 1979 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (B.A.Hons. 1979) from the Department of History, University of Adelaide.
|
14 |
Something of himself : textual and historical revision in Rudyard Kipling's Kim /Stuckey, Lexi. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.), English--University of Central Oklahoma, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 75-80).
|
15 |
Word-formation in Kipling a stylistic-philological study /Leeb-Lundberg, W. January 1909 (has links)
Akademisk afhandling--Lund, 1909. / "Works consulted": p. vii; "Kipling bibliography": verso of p. vii.
|
16 |
Rudyard Kipling's changing vision of IndiaKarim, Muhammad Enamul, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1970. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 210-219).
|
17 |
Kipling's literary reputationMacLeod, Beatrice Merrigold January 1970 (has links)
Kipling's perplexed relationship with his critics -and especially with those whose opinions mattered - has no parallel in the history of letters. At every stage in his career they made him the epicentre of controversy. Friends and enemies alike misrepresented him in their biased and contradictory judgments. In the '90's the majority helped to set him up as a national idol; after 1899 they engineered his fall into disrepute.
His fate at the hands of the pundits deserves to be studied in some detail. This inquiry into the state of his reputation and the aberrations of Kipling criticism between 1889 and 1914 follows the trend of the times and the shifts of critical opinion, and deals with a series of reviews published in a selected group of eight influential journals. These include the Edinburgh Review, the Quarterly, Blackwood's Magazine, the Contemporary Review, the Fortnightly Review, the Athenaeum, the Saturday Review and the Bookman.
Kipling achieved early and unprecedented success. His startling presence was noted in a spate of articles and reviews in which he was recognized as a formidable new talent. Singled out by Oscar Wilde, approved by the Times, he impressed all who chose to comment on his work, even those whose findings were unfavourable. Many were gratified and enthusiastic; many temporized. The ultra-conservative confessed to grave
misgivings; the liberal-radical were frankly suspicious of his views.
Within a very few years the critics were responding to a supereminent Kipling, revealed as a prophet of Empire. Didactic and persuasive, he grew in stature as a public figure, unofficial laureate, spokesman for the Imperialists. Criticism became correspondingly political. The general chorus of praise reached a crescendo but voices of dissent were raised in angry protest. The liberal intellectuals were busy counteracting the evils of Kiplingism by outright condemnation of the author's prose,fiction and verse.
In 1899 the Boers' declaration of war coincided with the publication of Stalky and Co., bolstering the case for the opposition and effecting an abrupt change in the critical climate. There was a sudden highly emotional revulsion. Of the eight chosen periodicals only the Athenaeum was pleased with Stalky. Of the attacks that ensued none was more savage than Robert Buchanan's article in the Contemporary Review. Those who continued to support Kipling like Walter Besant were driven to defend and to apologize.
During the war and the subsequent period of recrimination, even the Tories began to give vent to their dissatisfaction. Kipling himself drew their censure by lashing out at government
and opposition alike. Scathing reviews of Kim reflected the general resentment. More than ever Kipling's well-wishers
were placed on the defensive. Former admirers justified their apostasy by explaining that the author's work had begun to decline with Stalky and Co. Some declared that the popular journalist had never been worthy of the attention he had received. Many lost interest and refrained further comment. In other quarters there was clear evidence of a deliberate move to ignore Kipling's claim to serious consideration.
By 1905 the decline of his reputation reached its final phase. The Conservative propagandist no longer threatened the Liberals. There was less bitterness, less polemical confrontation. The reviews were often perfunctory, contemptuous, ironic or gently disparaging. Most of the critics of any standing had convinced themselves that Kipling's fame had been founded on error, that his very popularity was sufficient proof of his lack of merit, that he had never been a great writer. Among the new generation of romantics, they saw him as an anachronism, out of place and out of fashion. He must in every respect be labelled "inadmissible."
Kipling was an honest but tendentious writer who met with an equally tendentious but essentially dishonest criticism. The reports of his contemporaries appear to have been seldom free from some form of special pleading. Their motivation was too often questionable and their lack of objectivity was notorious. Because they could not tolerate
his popularity, his success, his unfashionable philosophy, his discredited politics, his stubborn, retrogressive Philistinism and his refusal to countenance what he called the Gods of the Market Place, the critics were led to reject Kipling's art. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
|
18 |
Kipling's "Law" : a study of his philosophy of life.Shamsul Islam, 1942- January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
|
19 |
Rudyard Kipling and Victorian BuddhismLouttit, Erin January 2013 (has links)
The thesis recontextualises the fiction of the nineteenth- and twentieth-century writer Rudyard Kipling by exploring aspects of Victorian Buddhism in a selection of his published work. It demonstrates his engagement with a variety of Buddhist histories and cultures, showing a serious artistic and imaginative response to and interpretation of Buddhism. Focusing primarily on the novel Kim, the thesis develops existing criticism, examining the character of the lama. Additionally, it studies features of Victorian Buddhism other than textual sources, drawing on work by scholars in fields such as the history of art and the history of religion. As well as considering varied Buddhist elements in Kim, the thesis examines the theme of the survival of the soul, situating short stories from various periods of Kipling's writing life in the context of scholarly debates about Nirvana and reincarnation. Attention is also given to critically neglected travel writing from the Letters of Marque series written for periodical publication. Kipling's work is shown to be deeply concerned with and sympathetic to Buddhism and Buddhist cultures.
|
20 |
Wandlungsmotive in Rudyard Kiplings ProsawerkGauger, Wilhelm. January 1975 (has links)
Habilitationsschrift--Freie Universität, Berlin. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 235-255) and index.
|
Page generated in 0.0312 seconds