The nature and elements of poetry
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The nature and elements of poetry
(Foundations of literary theory : the nineteenth century)
Routledge/Thoemmes Press, 1995
- : set
- : hc
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Note
Reprint of: London : A.P. Watt, 1892
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The great outburst of literary theory in the eighteenth century was instrumental in establishing literary theory in the nineteenth century as an area of intellectual activity. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, more than anyone transformed both the status and the nature of literary theory. Arguing that questions about poetry and literature could lead to a structured system of assessment and judgements that had a validity that was different only in degree from that found in the physical sciences, Coleridge gave new authority to the "imaginative sciences".
The texts reprinted in this set cogently represent the emergence of literary theory as a new branch of literature.
Table of Contents
- Lectures on Poetry [1833] James Montgomery 404pp Treatises on Poetry, Modern Romance, and Rhetoric
- being the Articles under those heads, Contributed to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 7th Edition [1839] George Moir and William Spalding 383pp Imagination and Fancy [1844] Leigh Hunt 357pp Poetics: An Essay on Poetry [1852] Eneas Sweetland Dallas 302pp "The English Language" in the North British Review [1850] 25pp The Nature and Elements of Poetry [1893] E C Stedman 358pp "Sacred Poetry" in the Quarterly Review, xxxii, [1825] John Keble 21pp "On English Tragedy" in the Edinburgh Review [1828] 31pp "On English Poetry" in The Edinburgh Review [1825] 33pp "A Defence of Poetry" in The Edinburgh Review [1828] Brian Waller Proctor 20pp "Poetry, with Reference to Aristotle's Poetics" in The London Review [1829] John Henry Newman 18pp "What is Poetry?" 10pp "The Two Kinds of Poetry" 10pp in the Monthly Repository [1833] John Stuart Mill "Theories of Poetry and a New Poet" in the North British Reviews,[1853] David Masson 47pp
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