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The Influence of William Blake on the poetry and prose of Dylan ThomasGrant, Hugh Joseph January 1968 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to investigate the nature and extent of Dylan Thomas's artistic debt to William Blake. "Chapter I" of our study documents Thomas's professional interest in Blake, offering evidence that Thomas read Blake extensively and carefully. Further, evidence is presented of Thomas's admiration of Blake as a poet and his stated desire to emulate him.
"Chapter II" traces Thomas’s direct borrowings from Blake in his 18 Poems as well as in a short story. Because Northrop Frye's idea of the importance of and significance of literary borrowing and literary allusion dictates the direction of much of our argument, our discussion attempts to show the significance of Thomas's borrowings; the implication is that Thomas's imagination shared certain archetypal similarities to that of Blake's. The method of investigation used throughout the thesis, then, has involved a detailed examination of the poems of both poets with the purpose in mind of indicating, where possible, the archetypal significance of the borrowing.
"Chapter III" attempts to establish Thomas's direct debt to Blake for many of his images and concepts in his "Altarwise by Owl-Light" sonnet sequence. Our implication is that Thomas was directly influenced in writing the sequence by his knowledge of Blake's epics Vala and Milton. Evidence is presented, in fact, that Thomas borrowed certain of the images for his sonnets from Blake's epics.
The preoccupation of both Blake and Thomas with the sinister female will aspect of love in marriage is investigated in "Chapter IV"; our argument implies that Blake derived much of his attitude toward married love from Milton, and through both Milton and Blake, Thomas inherited a somewhat similar attitude. At all times, however, our chief concern is with the poetry resulting from these underlying tensions.
There emerges from our study evidence of a striking similarity in artistic vision between Blake and Thomas. Our tracing of literary archetypes (in Northrop Frye's definition) and analogues in the poems leads to the conclusion that Thomas saw the universe from a somewhat similar point of view to that of Blake. "Chapter V" compares Blake’s Jerusalem with Thomas's last poems to establish a correspondence of achieved vision. The comparison is validated, and our argument proceeds to show that, while Thomas was attempting to move in a similar visionary direction to Blake in terms of art, Blake far outstripped the Welsh poet from the point of view of achieved total vision expressed through poetry.
Our conclusion follows that, while Thomas, throughout his artistic career, was influenced by Blake and borrowed from him, he found himself at a creative impasse out of which he attempted to work by turning to voice drama in the form of a dramatic and highly imaginative documentary called Under Milk Wood, and even this, his last work, is in some ways reminiscent of Blake's influence. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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SÅNGER av INSIKT och SÅNGER om PANIK - en essä om Blaiken, Blake och det konstnärliga avtrycketHöj Krantz, Linus January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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"Futurity is in this moment" : millennial prophecy and Blake's Bible of hellRoxborough, David. January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Giuseppe Ungaretti and William Blake : the relationship and the translation.Di Pietro, John. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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REWRITING THE FALL: LYRA BELACQUA’S RESISTANCE TO ADULT IDEOLOGY IN HIS DARK MATERIALSMoore, Daniel T. January 2014 (has links)
This thesis examines resistance to adult ideology by child/adolescent characters in Philip Pullmans’ His Dark Materials. Drawing on terminology provided by Maria Nikolajeva (aetonormativity) and Roberta Trites (power within repression) this paper describes the development of Lyra Belacqua, the protagonist of The Golden Compass. It identifies in Pullman’s text a particular emphasis on allowing children to develop into adolescents before subjecting them to religious or secular ideologies. This thesis works with the terms Entwicklungsroman and Bildungsroman in order to illuminate and complicate the subject-positions: adolescent, child and adult. This thesis demonstrates the particular attention to qualities of adolescence and childhood in Pullman’s works, and the effect that reconstructing adolescence as an end-point for child characters has on child protagonists, by contrast to adulthood as a destination. / Thesis / Master of Arts (MA)
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William Blake's "Jerusalem," the Cosmic Projection of the Inner Life of a Prophetic MysticClarke, Jack C. January 1959 (has links)
No description available.
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William Blake's "Jerusalem," the Cosmic Projection of the Inner Life of a Prophetic MysticClarke, Jack C. January 1959 (has links)
No description available.
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Metametascience Towards ReconciliationKennedy, John P. January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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The Satanic Blake : the continuing empathy with rebellious and creative energy as presented in "Satan Rousing His Legions"Meckelborg, Robert James, University of Lethbridge. Faculty of Arts and Science January 2007 (has links)
Through an examination of Blake’s idea of Satan and his depiction of Satan and the rebel angels in the Paradise Lost design Satan Rousing his Legions, my thesis will demonstrate four principle findings, in addition to offering a fresh and unconventional interpretation to what is arguably Blake’s most profound depiction of Satan. One result is the demonstration that Blake maintained and developed his idea of Satan as a force of revolutionary energy and paradigm of Creative Imagination throughout his life. Secondly, I will demonstrate that Blake’s employment of, and references to, a punitive, destructive, and materialistic Satan is in fact a personification of the oppressive aspect of the Church and State. My third determination is that Blake’s vision of the Church as the oppressive and repressive tyrant Urizen did not soften as he aged but was steadfastly maintained until his death. And finally, I will establish that Blake did in fact maintain his revolutionary enthusiasm his entire life. / iv, 236 leaves : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm.
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MOSTRANDO OS ESTADOS CONTRÁRIOS DA ALMA HUMANA : UM ESTUDO DAS CANÇÕES DE INOCÊNCIA E DE EXPERIÊNCIA, DE WILLIAM BLAKE / SHEWING THE TWO CONTRARY STATES OF THE HUMAN SOUL : A STUDY OF THE WILLIAM BLAKE S SONGS OF INNOCENCE AND OF EXPERIENCEOliveira, Leandro Cardoso de 17 December 2015 (has links)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / William Blake was a painter, poet and printmaker. The author demonstrated a large
experimentation in the production of his art, developing his own method of printing
and publishing. Such method made possible the creation of the so called illuminated
books, support in which was published most of his composite art, which combines
poetry and painting in an inseparable way. This dissertation aims to examine the
states of "Innocence" and of "Experience" in the illuminated books Songs of
Innocence (1789), Songs of Experience (1794) and Songs of Innocence and of
Experience - Shewing the Two Contrary States of the Human Soul (1794 ). Usually,
the Blake's "Innocence state", in the text and in the visual compositions, is associated
with idealized existence, childhood figures and fertile nature. "Experience", on the
other hand, presents urban scenes or arid nature, adult images and a different
perspective about life, without the characteristic idealization of "Innocence". However,
although the titles of the volumes indicate which compositions would be of
"Innocence" and what would be of Experience", the compositions have evidences
that perhaps these states are not clearly defined or contrary, as the subtitle of the
agglutinated edition indicates. Examples of it, besides adult figures on the
Innocence book and childhood images on the Experience , are compositions that
appear in both Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience, depending on the
copy. Considering the switchable aspect of this collection of poems and the
reallocations made by Blake in the several copies of the books, it will be observed
what is the elements that fundaments the states of "Innocence" and of "Experience"
on the three books of Songs. / William Blake foi pintor, poeta e gravurista. O autor demonstrou grande
experimentação na produção de sua arte, elaborando o seu próprio método de
impressão e publicação. Tal método viabilizou a criação dos chamados livros
iluminados, suporte que possibilitou unir poesia e pintura de forma indissociável.
Nesta dissertação, serão analisados os estados de Inocência e de Experiência
nos livros iluminados Songs of Innocence (1789), Songs of Experience (1794) e
Songs of Innocence and of Experience - Shewing the Two Contrary States of the
Human Soul (1794). Comumente, o estado de Inocência em Blake é associado à
existência idealizada, a figuras infantis e à natureza fértil, tanto nos textos quanto
nas composições visuais. Experiência , por outro lado, apresentaria cenários
urbanos ou de natureza árida, imagens adultas e um olhar diferenciado sobre a vida,
sem a idealização característica de Inocência . Entretanto, embora os títulos dos
volumes indiquem quais composições seriam sobre a Inocência e quais versariam
acerca da Experiência , as composições possuem indícios de que talvez esses
estados não sejam claramente delimitados ou contrários, como indica o subtítulo da
edição conjunta. Exemplos disso, além de figuras adultas na parte de Inocência do
livro e de presenças infantis em Experiência , são os poemas que aparecem tanto
em Songs of Innocence quanto em Songs of Experience, dependendo da cópia do
livro. Considerando o aspecto cambiável desse conjunto de poemas e as
realocações realizadas por Blake nas diversas edições das obras, serão observados
os elementos que fundamentam os estados de Inocência e de Experiência dentro
dos três exemplares de Songs.
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