In this new study Professor Bareham re-examines the poetry of Crabbe in all its contexts - emotional, critical, sociological, and technical. He offers a much-needed fresh appraisal of Crabbe's work. He re-examines Crabbe's early verse and goes beyond the established Crabbe canon to include for scrutiny the poetry published since the poet's death. He argues that these neglected aspects of Crabbe's work provoke an overdue re-evaluation of his place in the literary pantheon. / Crabbe has often been mis-judged. Many conventional critical assessments have represented him as unimaginative, old-fashioned, pessimistic, pre-occupied with unpalatable and mundane material, and satisfied with a plodding verse metre. Such a view suppresses Crabbe's true originality. Professor Bareham shows that whilst we inevitably experience Crabbe through historical judgements, and through the preoccupations of our contemporary judgments and prejudices, we can see a rather different Crabbe by an imaginative effort to recapture the sense of the poet's own times as he must have experienced them, not as retrospective academic criticisms have conveniently described them. / Thus while his literary 'place' is customarily assigned between 'augustan' and 'romantic' modes, this book suggests that Crabbe, working creatively between 1770 and 1830, would certainly not have sensed any such defining imaginative schism. / This revisionist study emphasises that Crabbe had the ability to embrace the conventions of a lyrical tradition that found popular outlet in the Pleasure Gardens; he brings to a new excellence the long-standing convention of the didactic verse essay; and at the other end of the emotional scale he captures and utilises the spirit of exotic 'gothicism' and psychic disturbance.
No Victorian creative writer more comprehensively illustrates the ups and downs of the nearly-but-not-quite-first rate. A comprehensive Bibliography is long overdue both as a tribute to the author himself and as exemplum of publishing in a crowded, rich and exciting period. This major new study of the publishing history of the Irish novelist Charles Lever gives in microcosm the history of a significant number of Victorian novelists, and of publishing itself in fast changing decades.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.