The churchyard is a familiar but little-understood literary landscape in eighteenth-century scholarship. This book recovers work by women and labouring-class poets to argue that the churchyard was an important and revealing site in the cultural imaginary as this period negotiated the transition to capitalism.
The churchyard is a familiar but little-understood literary landscape in eighteenth-century scholarship. This book recovers work by women and labouring-class poets to argue that the churchyard was an important and revealing site in the cultural imaginary as this period negotiated the transition to capitalism.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
James Metcalf is a Lecturer in Eighteenth-Century English Literature at The University of Manchester, where he joined the Department of English, American Studies, and Creative Writing in 2023. He studied at the University of York and worked as a journalist before taking his AHRC-funded PhD at King's College London, and he was Lecturer in Eighteenth-Century Literature and Culture at King's from 2021 to 2023.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction: Churchyard Poetics, 1743-1821 * 1: 'Earthing up': Robert Blair's Churchyard Georgic * 2: The Working Body's Decline: Mary Leapor's Pastoral and Ann Yearsley's Topographical Poetry * 3: Churchyard Collapse: Charlotte Smith and Elegy * 4: 'All ploughd and buried now': John Clare's Mixed Genres and the Long Churchyard Poem * Postscript * Bibliography * Index
* Introduction: Churchyard Poetics, 1743-1821 * 1: 'Earthing up': Robert Blair's Churchyard Georgic * 2: The Working Body's Decline: Mary Leapor's Pastoral and Ann Yearsley's Topographical Poetry * 3: Churchyard Collapse: Charlotte Smith and Elegy * 4: 'All ploughd and buried now': John Clare's Mixed Genres and the Long Churchyard Poem * Postscript * Bibliography * Index
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