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Matthew Bevis & James Williams 
Edward Lear and the Play of Poetry 

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Of all the Victorian poets, Edward Lear has a good claim to the widest audience: admired and championed by critics and poets from John Ruskin to John Ashbery, he has also been read, heard, and loved by generations of children. As a central figure in the literature of nonsense, Lear has also shaped the evolution of modern literature, and his work continues to influence and inspire writers and readers today. This collection of essays-the first ever devoted solely to Lear-builds on a recent resurgence of critical interest and asks how it is that the play of Lear’s poetry continues to delight, and to challenge our sense of what poetry can be. These seventeen chapters, written by established and emerging critics of poetry, seek to explore and appreciate theplayfulness embodied in the poems, and to provide contexts in which it can be better understood and enjoyed. They consider how Lear’s poems play off various inheritances (the literary fool, Romantic lyric, his religious upbringing), explore particular forms in which his playful genius took flight (his letters, his queer writings about love), and trace lines of Learical influence and inheritance by showing how other poets and thinkers across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries played off Learin their turn (Joyce, Stein, Eliot, Auden, Smith, Ashbery, and others).
€32.87
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Language English ● Format PDF ● Pages 400 ● ISBN 9780191018183 ● Editor Matthew Bevis & James Williams ● Publisher OUP Oxford ● Published 2016 ● Downloadable 3 times ● Currency EUR ● ID 5280415 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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