ByronJane Stabler Brings together late-20th-century work on Byron by British and American scholars and critics, guiding undergraduate students and sixth-form pupils through the different ways in which new literary theory has enriched readings of Byron's work. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
JEROME J MCGANN Lord Byrons Twin Opposites of Truth | 24 |
Manfred | 52 |
Copyright | |
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allusion argues authority Bulwer Lytton Byron's poem Byron's poetry Byron's texts Byron's writing Cambridge Canto character Childe Harold Childe Harold's Pilgrimage Clarendon Press Coleridge contemporary context contradiction couplet critique cultural death deconstruction digression discourse Disraeli Don Juan drama Edleston effeminacy Eliot episode essay example female feminine feminism Fictions gender Haidée historical Hobhouse homosexual I. A. Richards ideology imagination irony Jerome McGann Juan's Julia Lady Byron language Lara Lara's letter literature London Lord Byron M. H. Abrams male Manfred Manfred's Marchand Marino Faliero masculine masquerade meaning Meiners modern moral mother narrative narrator nature Newey Oxford passion play poem's poet poet's poetic political post-structural postmodern reader reading relationship represented rhyme role Romantic poetry Romanticism satire Ségur sexual sincerity social society Southey spirit stanza Steno's Suggested cross-references symbolic T. S. Eliot theory tradition transvestism transvestite truth verse Wolfson woman women words Wordsworth