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Nineteenth-century Women Poets
Isobel Armstrong
其他書名
An Oxford Anthology
出版
Clarendon Press
, 1996
主題
Biography & Autobiography / Literary Figures
Literary Criticism / General
Poetry / Anthologies (multiple authors)
Poetry / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
ISBN
0198184832
9780198184836
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=SgAOAQAAMAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
INineteenth-Century Women Poets is a major new anthology, selecting widely from writings produced in a period that has traditionally been associated with relatively few eminent female poets. Opening with Anna Laetitia Barbauld's petition to William Wilberforce and ending with the myth-makingIrish writers of the Celtic revival, Nineteenth-Century Women Poets rediscovers rich and diverse female traditions. The anthology presents the work of over one hundred women writers. Besides featuring distinguished middle-class poets such as Felicia Hemans, Elizabeth Barrett-Browning, and ChristinaRossetti, the collection presents work by authors such as Maria Jane Jewsbury, Augusta Webster, and Michael Field, whose significance is only now becoming apparent. It achieves range and depth by reprinting poems by working-class, colonial, and political poets, in addition to very substantialselections from the work of major figures. The collection draws on first editions wherever possible. The chronological span of the anthology provides a unique perspective on women's poetry from the late-Romantic period to the Victorian fin-de-siecle. The editorial commentary and headnotes are a rich resource of women's history. They supply biographical details, document the activities andpublications of individual poets, examine the political formations and cultural groupings to which these writers belonged, and describe the print media which made the development of their work possible, in particular the minority journals that allowed them a voice. Nineteenth-Century Women Poetsidentifies the thematic interconnections between different women writers, disclosing their common preoccupations with marriage, slavery, war, national identity, religion, and sexuality. It reveals how poetic styles and attitudes were transformed across the course of one hundred years, from the poetof sensibility to the New Woman.