Byron, poetics and history
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Byron, poetics and history
(Cambridge studies in romanticism, 52)
Cambridge University Press, 2009
- : pbk
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Note
First published: 2002
Includes bibliographical references (p. 225-241) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Jane Stabler offers the first full-scale examination of Byron's poetic form in relation to historical debates of his time. Responding to recent studies of publishing and audiences in the Romantic period, Stabler argues that Byron's poetics developed in response to contemporary cultural history and his reception by the English reading public. Drawing on extensive new archive research into Byron's correspondence and reading, Stabler traces the complexity of the intertextual dialogues that run through his work. For example, Stabler analyses Don Juan alongside Galignani's Messenger - Byron's principal source of news about British politics while in Italy - and refers to hitherto unpublished letters between Byron's publishers and his friends to reveal a powerful impulse among his contemporaries to direct his controversial poetic style to their own conflicting political ends. This fascinating study will be of interest to Byronists and, more broadly, to scholars of Romanticism in general.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on texts used
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction: Byron and the poetics of digression
- 1. 'Scorching and drenching': discourses of digression among Byron's readers
- 2. 'Breaches in transition': eighteenth-century digressions and Byron's early verse
- 3. Erring with Pope: Hints from Horace and the trouble with decency
- 4. Uncertain blisses: Don Juan, digressive intertextuality and the risks of reception
- 5. 'The worst of sinning': Don Juan, moral England and feminine caprice
- 6. 'Between carelessness and trouble': Byron's last digressions
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.
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