From Dickens to HardyBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1982 - 527 pages The Victorian social and political scene - Literary scene -Charles Dickens - Thackeray and Trollope - Tennyson - Robert Browning - Bronte sisters - George Eliot - Language and literature in the Victorian period - Matthew Arnold - Gerard Manley Hopkins - Hardy's tales - Aspects of Victorian architecture. |
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Page 180
... literary nor yet non - literary . To conceive of literary value in autonomous or unchanging terms is to court one sort of disaster - the sort that removes the production and reading of a text out of its actual context and therefore out ...
... literary nor yet non - literary . To conceive of literary value in autonomous or unchanging terms is to court one sort of disaster - the sort that removes the production and reading of a text out of its actual context and therefore out ...
Page 184
... Literary Gazette ( 1817 ) was more purely a comprehensive literary chronicle . Both these were to continue until late in the century , but for the Victorian period the two weeklies founded in 1828 , the Athenaeum and the Spectator ...
... Literary Gazette ( 1817 ) was more purely a comprehensive literary chronicle . Both these were to continue until late in the century , but for the Victorian period the two weeklies founded in 1828 , the Athenaeum and the Spectator ...
Page 187
... literary values and literary history . The Fortnightly soon evoked imitators in the Contemporary Review ( 1866 ) , the Nineteenth Century ( 1877 ) , and the National Review ( 1883 ) . The Contemporary was a mainly religious periodical ...
... literary values and literary history . The Fortnightly soon evoked imitators in the Contemporary Review ( 1866 ) , the Nineteenth Century ( 1877 ) , and the National Review ( 1883 ) . The Contemporary was a mainly religious periodical ...
Table des matières
PART | 13 |
ROBIN MAYHEAD | 220 |
LEO SALINGAR | 237 |
Droits d'auteur | |
14 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
acceptance achievement appears architecture Arnold beauty become beginning better buildings called Carlyle century character common concerned contrast course criticism death described detail Dickens early effect Eliot emotional England English essay example experience expression fact feeling fiction George give hand Hardy Hardy's House human imagination important impression industrial influence interest kind language later less literary literature living London look means mind moral nature never novel novelist once opening perhaps period poem poet poetry political popular present reader reading relation represent romantic Ruskin seems seen sense sentiment shows social society spirit story style success suggest Tennyson things thought town tradition true turn verse Victorian whole writing written wrote young