This study explores Coleridge's response to several crucial issues of the revolutionary and post-revolutionary age: the rise and suppression of English radicalism during the decade of the French Revolution and the tragic questions of slavery and the slave trade. It consists of two distinct, but intimately related parts. Based on Coleridge's ...
As much a doubter as a believer, Emily Dickinson often expressed views about God in general - and God with respect to suffering in particular. In many of her poems, she contemplates the question posed by countless theologians and poets before her: how can one reconcile a benevolent deity with evil in the world?Examining Dickinson's perspectives on ...
"Emerson, Romanticism, and Intuitive Reason" is a comparative study in transatlantic Romanticism, focusing on Emerson's part in the American dialogue with British Romanticism and, as filtered through Coleridge, German Idealist philosophy. The book's guiding theme is the concept of intuitive Reason, which Emerson derived from Coleridge's ...
by
Blake, William (Studies Of). David Worrall, David V. Erdman, Paul Minor, Christopher Heppner, Patrick J. Keane (Contributors)
other copies of this book
Binding: Wrappers
Publisher: Readex Books
Date Published: 1981
Description: Good. No Jacket (Paperback) Wide 8vo. pp. 269-390, illustrated in b/w throughout. Wrappers handled, rubbed and edgeworn with a few tiny chips and tears, with ink stamp on front cover, page corners lightly bumped, small neat ink stamp on Contents page, othewise unmarked. read more
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The Novel and the Nation: Studies in the New Irish Fiction