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A fresh flame for a quiet classic: a critical compass from Victorian Britain and Ireland that still speaks with clarity and charm. This is not merely a republication but a thoughtfully curated critical essay collection that maps the emergence of literary criticism as a discipline. Through Arnold's incisive passages, the volume becomes a literary criticism anthology that probes language and national character, the Celtic heritage in literature, and the weaving of folklore and myth into writing. It offers accessible entry points for readers new to scholarly study and a rigorous frame for for…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A fresh flame for a quiet classic: a critical compass from Victorian Britain and Ireland that still speaks with clarity and charm. This is not merely a republication but a thoughtfully curated critical essay collection that maps the emergence of literary criticism as a discipline. Through Arnold's incisive passages, the volume becomes a literary criticism anthology that probes language and national character, the Celtic heritage in literature, and the weaving of folklore and myth into writing. It offers accessible entry points for readers new to scholarly study and a rigorous frame for for literature students exploring how ideas travel from T. S. Eliot's late modernism to earlier voices, including echoes of William Morris and other contemporaries. The collection serves as an academic study resource and a compelling literature curriculum module, inviting readers to see how craft, culture, and canon formation intersect. Historically, the work anchors debates about national identity and the role of imagination in criticism, making it a touchstone for scholars and collectors alike. Its enduring significance rests in how it treats literature as a living conversation about ethos, tradition, and influence. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions, it is restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure for both casual readers and classic-literature connoisseurs who cherish rigorous insight and lyrical sensibility.
Autorenporträt
English poet and culture critic Matthew Arnold was born on December 24, 1822, and died on April 15, 1888. He also worked as a school inspector. He was born to Thomas Arnold, who was the famous teacher of Rugby School, and his siblings were Tom Arnold, who taught literature, and William Delafield Arnold, who wrote novels and ran the colonies. People have called Matthew Arnold a "sage writer," which means that his books chastise and teach the reader about modern social problems. He also worked as a school inspector for 35 years and backed the idea of secondary education being regulated by the state. Thomas Arnold and his wife Mary Penrose Arnold (1791-1873) had one son. He was born on December 24, 1822, in Laleham-On-Thames, Middlesex. Matthew asked John Keble to be his godfather. In 1828, Thomas Arnold was made Headmaster of Rugby School, which is where the family moved that same year. Arnold was taught in Laleham by his priest uncle John Buckland starting in 1831. In 1834, the Arnold family stayed at Fox How, a vacation home in the Lake District. Wordsworth lived nearby and was friendly with the people who lived there.