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      Book

      The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry
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      Book

      The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry

      DOI link for The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry

      The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry book

      The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry

      DOI link for The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry

      The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry book

      Edited ByPhyllis Weliver
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2005
      eBook Published 25 October 2017
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315086583
      Pages 288
      eBook ISBN 9781315086583
      Subjects Arts
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      Weliver, P. (Ed.). (2005). The Figure of Music in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315086583

      ABSTRACT

      How was music depicted in and mediated through Romantic and Victorian poetry? This is the central question that this specially commissioned volume of essays sets out to explore in order to understand better music's place and its significance in nineteenth-century British culture. Analysing how music took part in and commented on a wide range of scientific, literary, and cultural discourses, the book expands our knowledge of how music was central to the nineteenth-century imagination. Like its companion volume, The Idea of Music in Victorian Fiction (Ashgate, 2004) edited by Sophie Fuller and Nicky Losseff, this book provides a meeting place for literary studies and musicology, with contributions by scholars situated in each field. Areas investigated in these essays include the Romantic interest in national musical traditions; the figure of the Eolian harp in the poetry of Coleridge and Shelley; the recurring theme of music in Blake's verse; settings of Tennyson by Parry and Elgar that demonstrate how literary representations of musical ideas are refigured in music; George Eliot's use of music in her poetry to explore literary and philosophical themes; music in the verse of Christina and Dante Gabriel Rossetti; the personification of lyric (Sappho) in a song cycle by Granville and Helen Bantock; and music and sexual identity in the poetry of Wilde, Symons, Michael Field, Beardsley, Gray and Davidson.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |24 pages

      Introduction

      chapter 1|25 pages

      Scotch Drink & Irish Harps: Mediations of the National Air

      ByCeleste Langan

      chapter 2|20 pages

      “Suspended” Sense in Alastor: Shelley’s Musical Trope and Eighteenth-Century Medical Discourse

      ByKimiyo Ogawa

      chapter 3|15 pages

      On Music Framed: The Eolian Harp in Romantic Writing

      BySusan Bernstein

      chapter 4|22 pages

      Music and Inspiration in Blake’s Poetry

      ByJohn Hughes

      chapter 5|25 pages

      “Music their larger soul”: George Eliot’s “The Legend of Jubal” and Victorian Musicality

      ByRuth A. Solie

      chapter 6|42 pages

      Musical Reactions to Tennyson: Reformulating Musical Imagery in “The Lotos-Eaters”

      ByMichael Allis

      chapter 7|20 pages

      “Monna Innominata” and Christina Rossetti’s Audible Unhappiness

      ByYeo Wei Wei

      chapter 8|19 pages

      The “silent song” of D.G. Rossetti’s The House of Life

      ByPhyllis Weliver

      chapter 9|17 pages

      “The Music Spoke for Us”: Music and Sexuality in fin-de-siècle Poetry

      ByEmma Sutton

      chapter 10|29 pages

      Sappho Recomposed: A Song Cycle by Granville and Helen Bantock

      ByYopie Prins
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