Frost's Road Taken

Передняя обложка
P. Lang, 1996 - Всего страниц: 250
According to the revived Robert Frost Society Newsletter, Frost is now more in the limelight than ever. By focusing on him first as a Romantic-Realist, Professor Fleissner shows Frost's debt to major British Romantics, Victorians, as well as American poets (the latter being influences not generally known). Dr. Fleissner comes to terms with Frost as a spiritual writer, stressing his use of the Bible, and discusses a transcription of a Frost manuscript of a new poetic construct. Lastly the author provides an up-to-date account of the poet's relation to multiculturalism in terms of ethnic issues. As the title is meant to convey, the book concerns not a journey assumed merely by a Frost devotee, but Robert Frost's own road being taken, namely that originally traversed by the poet himself and now transformed into essay format.

Результаты поиска по книге

Содержание

the Picturesque Wordsworth Reechoed
31
A FrostDickinson
81
Accompanying Robert Frost with Cranes The
99
Авторские права

Не показаны другие разделы: 10

Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения

Об авторе (1996)

The Author: Robert F. Fleissner is the author of Dickens and Shakespeare; Resolved to Love: The 1592 Edition fo Henry Constable's 'Diana' Critically Considered; The Prince and the Professor; A Rose by Another Name: A Survey of Literary Flora from Shakespeare to Eco; Ascending the Prufrockian Stair: Studies in a Dissociated Sensibility (Peter Lang, 1988); and T.S. Eliot and the Heritage of Africa: The Magus and the Moor as Metaphor (Peter Lang, 1992). He was also at Robert Frost's Bread Loaf School of English two years to do graduate work.

Библиографические данные