Views and Reviews: Essays in appreciation: Literature


Book Description

"Views and Reviews: Essays in appreciation: Literature" is a collection of essays of literary criticism reviewing the works of the world's greatest writers like Dumas, Thackeray, Byron, Hugo, Heine, Homer, Shakespeare, and others. The author considers the main topics, types of characters, philosophical themes, and styles of their works.




A Sweet View


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From country lanes to thatch roofs, a stroll through the enduring appeal of the nineteenth-century trope of rural English bliss. A Sweet View explores how writers and artists in the nineteenth century shaped the English countryside as a partly imaginary idyll, with its distinctive repertoire of idealized scenery: the village green, the old country churchyard, hedgerows and cottages, scenic variety concentrated into a small compass, snugness and comfort. The book draws on a very wide range of contemporary sources and features some of the key makers of the “South Country” rural idyll, including Samuel Palmer, Myles Birket Foster, and Richard Jefferies. The legacy of the idyll still influences popular perceptions of the essential character of a certain kind of English landscape—indeed for Henry James that imagery constituted “the very essence of England” itself. As A Sweet View makes clear, the countryside idyll forged over a century ago is still with us today.




Alphabetical Finding List


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Impressions and Opinions


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The Critic


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For England's Sake


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"Mr. Henley's works" on final 12 pages includes advertisements and reviews of previous editions of William Henley's works.




The Bookseller


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The Athenaeum


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Tragedy in the Victorian Novel


Book Description

How does one dominant literary genre fall into decline, to be superseded by another? The classic instance is the rise of the novel in the nineteenth century, and how it came to embody the tragic vision of life which had previously been the domain of drama. Dr King focuses on three novelists, George Eliot. Thomas Hardy and Henry James. All three, while trying to offer a realistic picture of life in prose narrative, wrote with the concept of tragedy clearly in mind. The concern was widespread, and Victorian literary critics found themselves discussing the problem of how one might reconcile concepts as dissimilar as tragedy and realism. Their criticism provides Dr King with her starting point. Dr King examines the work of her three authors in relation to the large concepts of traditional tragic thought, and also examines how the form of specific novels was affected by their differing ideas of tragedy.