Dark Figures in the Desired Country

Dark Figures in the Desired Country PDF

Author: Gerda S. Norvig

Publisher: Univ of California Press

Published: 1993-01-01

Total Pages: 402

ISBN-13: 9780520044715

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"Gerda Norvig has written a book on Blake's Bunyan illustrations that is much more than that: it revises our sense of Blake, of the relationship of illustrator to illustrated text, and the assumptions of Romantic and Romanticist writing. Blake, certainly, will not be the same after Norvig's vigorous analysis, and it is arguable that the same may be true of Romanticism."--Ronald Paulson, author of "Figure and Abstraction in Contemporary Painting" "Specialists in both Blake studies and English Romanticism will find this book extremely interesting and useful. Norvig carefully analyzes for the first time a set of Blake's most accomplished illustrations, a set that (as she points out) has very rarely been reproduced or exhibited. These designs certainly deserve to be better known, and Norvig's insightful and stimulating interpretation of them makes their importance to Blake's thought and career amply clear. This is certainly a book that all Blake specialists will have to know."--Anne K. Mellor, author of "Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters"

Samuel Palmer, 1805-1881

Samuel Palmer, 1805-1881 PDF

Author: William Vaughan

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13:

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The exhibition and accompanying book will allow a twenty-first century audience to rediscover his beautiful, moving and popular works.

Tate British Artists

Tate British Artists PDF

Author: Timothy Wilcox

Publisher: Tate

Published: 2005-12

Total Pages: 88

ISBN-13:

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Published to celebrate the bicentenary of Samuel Palmer's birth, this work presents a comprehensive introduction to Palmer's art, including new interpretations of many of his paintings.

Grace Overwhelming

Grace Overwhelming PDF

Author: Anne Dunan-Page

Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 364

ISBN-13:

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Awarded the 2007 National Research Prize SAES/AEFA. This study is a reappraisal of John Bunyan in the light of the dissenting religious culture of the late-seventeenth century. Charges of schism and fanaticism were repeatedly levelled against Bunyan, both from within the dissenting community and without, but far from being chastened by these accusations, Bunyan responded with a religious discourse marked by a rhetoric of excess. The focus of this book is therefore upon Bunyan's overwhelming spiritual experiences, especially the representation of torment, in his literary and polemical works. The believers' suffering was an obsessive concern of dissenting ministers, even to the point where their writings are often remembered today for little else. Hitherto, most scholars have termed all the mental states that they invoke 'despair', but this simplifies the experiences at issue. A wealth of contemporary material helps to restore the nuances of seventeenth-century physical and spiritual conditions, from enthusiasm to melancholy and madness; from fear to desertion and sloth. These chapters explore fresh ways in which this subtle typology of torment and its extreme manifestations form the core of the literary expression of Restoration dissent, challenging Bunyan to represent spiritual equilibrium as the ultimate quest of the earthly pilgrimage.