The Echoing Woods: Bucolic and Pastoral from Theocritus to WordsworthJ.C. Gieben, 1990 - 625 Seiten For the first time since more than ninety years a survey is offered of bucolic and pastoral, extending from the classical mainspring of the genre to the English 18th cen-tury. The emphasis is on the genre itself, the role of imitation in constituting and maintaining its identity, and on the Renaissance extension from bucolic to the wider and more diffuse phenomenon of pastoral. Therefore the seminal role of Theocritus, Virgil, Dante, Petrarch, Sannazaro, Tasso, and in England Spenser and Sidney is highlighted by means of an analysis of their works in this vein. The subject is of interest for classical scholars who want to become acquainted with the Renaissance revival and mutation of an ancient genre, and for students of English and comparative literature who want to study the important classical sources and the development of pastoral in English literature from 1578 up to the end of the eighteenth century. |
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Seite 123
... Latin literature came into being under the overwhelming influence of the Greek literary tradition . The past may have been a heavy burden for the Alexandrian poets , but it was even more dif- ficult to handle for Roman authors who had ...
... Latin literature came into being under the overwhelming influence of the Greek literary tradition . The past may have been a heavy burden for the Alexandrian poets , but it was even more dif- ficult to handle for Roman authors who had ...
Seite 284
... Latin and the vernacular as a vehicle for poetry , the poet defending his preference for Italian , even when writing in Latin . The point emerged again in the volumes of Petrarch and Boccaccio , both younger poets rejecting their work ...
... Latin and the vernacular as a vehicle for poetry , the poet defending his preference for Italian , even when writing in Latin . The point emerged again in the volumes of Petrarch and Boccaccio , both younger poets rejecting their work ...
Seite 290
... Latin . Yet because one author picks up and uses forms adopted by his predecessors , the eclogue in the vernacular is by this time regularly associated with a small repertoire of verse forms , ultimately deriving from the Ital- ian ...
... Latin . Yet because one author picks up and uses forms adopted by his predecessors , the eclogue in the vernacular is by this time regularly associated with a small repertoire of verse forms , ultimately deriving from the Ital- ian ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 1 |
constitution of a genre | 43 |
The Bucolica of Virgil | 79 |
Urheberrecht | |
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The Echoing Woods: Bucolic and Pastoral from Theocritus to Wordsworth E. Kegel-Brinkgreve Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2023 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accepted according already appearance Arcadia argued attempt become beginning beloved bucolic bucolic poetry called Calpurnius century chapter characters classical close comes compared contest contrast Corydon criticism Daphnis death described discussed echo eclogues element English epigrams evident fact figure flock genre give given Golden Greek herdsmen ideal Idylls imitation important influence instance interest interpretation introduced Italy keep kind Latin latter lines literary literature living lover Lycidas meaning mentioned nature noted nymphs particular passage pastoral perhaps period Petrarch picture play poem poet poetic poetry possible praise preceding present Queen quoted reader recurrent refers regard role romance rustic seems seen Servius setting shepherds sing singer situation song Spenser suggested term theme Theocritus thought tion Tityrus tradition turn vein Virgil's Ecl Virgilian woods written