Writing the Poetry of Place in Britain, 1700–1807

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A01=Elizabeth R. Napier
Author_Elizabeth R. Napier
autobiographical verse
Beachy Head
British literary studies
Category=DSBD
Category=DSC
Confer
Dense
Deserted Village
Duck
eighteenth-century poetry
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
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Goldsmith's Poem
Goldsmith’s Poem
Grongar Hill
Held
Horatian Ode
landscape imagination
Manners Tribute
memory in literature
Nature's Beauty
Nature’s Beauty
Odd
Paternal Acres
Persona
Poem's Outset
Poem’s Outset
poetic subjectivity
Reaper's Song
Reaper’s Song
selfhood in eighteenth-century poetry
Solitary Reaper
Suffolk Coast
Superimposed
Thresher's Labour
Thresher’s Labour
Title Page Vignette
Topographical Poetry
Violated
Wanders

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032188171
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book discusses the intrusion, often inadvertent, of personal voice into the poetry of landscape in Britain, 1700– 1807. It argues that strong conventions, such as those that inhere in topographical verse of the period, invite original poets to overstep those bounds while also shielding them from the repercussions of self-expression. Working under cover of convention in this manner and because for many of these poets place is tied in significant ways to personal history, poets of place may launch unexpected explorations into memory, personhood, and the workings of consciousness. This book thus supplements past, largely political, readings of landscape poetry, turning to questions of self-articulation and self-expression in order to argue that the autobiographical impulse is a distinctive and innovative feature of much great eighteenth-century poetry of place. Among the poets under examination are Pope, Thomson, Duck, Gray, Goldsmith, Crabbe, Cowper, Smith, and Wordsworth.

Elizabeth R. Napier is Professor Emerita in the Department of English, Middlebury College. She has published on, among other subjects, eighteenth-century English Gothic fiction, problems of embodiment in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English fiction, and narrative strategies in the work of Daniel Defoe.

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