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The Allegorical Temper

The Allegorical Temper
Author: Harry Berger
Publisher:
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1967
Genre: Allegory
ISBN:

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The Allegorical Temper

The Allegorical Temper
Author: Harry Berger (Jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 248
Release: 1967
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Allegorical Temper

The Allegorical Temper
Author: Harry Berger (jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 248
Release: 1957
Genre:
ISBN:

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The Calvinist Temper in English Poetry

The Calvinist Temper in English Poetry
Author: James D. Boulger
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter
Total Pages: 512
Release: 2013-02-18
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3110808722

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The Language of Allegory

The Language of Allegory
Author: Maureen Quilligan
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2018-09-05
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1501724487

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This lively and innovative work treats a body of literature not previously regarded as a unified genre. Offering comparative readings of a number of texts that are traditionally called allegories and that cover a wide time span, Maureen Quilligan formulates a vocabulary for talking about the distinctive generic elements they share. The texts she considers range from the twelfth-century De planctu naturae to Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow, and include such works as Le Roman de la Rose, Langland's Piers Plowman, Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter, Melville's Confidence Man, and Spenser's Faerie Queene. Whether or not readers agree with this book, they will enjoy and profit from it.


Reading the Allegorical Intertext

Reading the Allegorical Intertext
Author: Judith H. Anderson
Publisher: Fordham Univ Press
Total Pages: 452
Release: 2010-12-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0823228495

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Judith H. Anderson conceives the intertext as a relation between or among texts that encompasses both Kristevan intertextuality and traditional relationships of influence, imitation, allusion, and citation. Like the Internet, the intertext is a state, or place, of potential expressed in ways ranging from deliberate emulation to linguistic free play. Relatedly, the intertext is also a convenient fiction that enables examination of individual agency and sociocultural determinism. Anderson’s intertext is allegorical because Spenser’s Faerie Queene is pivotal to her study and because allegory, understood as continued or moving metaphor, encapsulates, even as it magnifies, the process of signification. Her title signals the variousness of an intertext extending from Chaucer through Shakespeare to Milton and the breadth of allegory itself. Literary allegory, in Anderson’s view, is at once a mimetic form and a psychic one—a process thinking that combines mind with matter, emblem with narrative, abstraction with history. Anderson’s first section focuses on relations between Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales and Spenser’s The Faerie Queene, including the role of the narrator, the nature of the textual source, the dynamics of influence, and the bearing of allegorical narrative on lyric vision. The second centers on agency and cultural influence in a variety of Spenserian and medieval texts. Allegorical form, a recurrent concern throughout, becomes the pressing issue of section three. This section treats plays and poems of Shakespeare and Milton and includes two intertextually relevant essays on Spenser. How Paradise Lost or Shakespeare’s plays participate in allegorical form is controversial. Spenser’s experiments with allegory revise its form, and this intervention is largely what Shakespeare and Milton find in his poetry and develop. Anderson’s book, the result of decades of teaching and writing about allegory, especially Spenserian allegory, will reorient thinking about fundamental critical issues and the landmark texts in which they play themselves out.


The Ruins of Allegory

The Ruins of Allegory
Author: Catherine Gimelli Martin
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 404
Release: 1998
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780822319894

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In a reexamination of the allegorical dimensions of PARADISE LOST, Catherine Martin presents Milton's poem as a prophecy foretelling the end of one culture and its replacement by another. Maintaining a dialogue with a critical tradition that extends from Johnson and Coleridge to the best contemporary Milton scholarship, Martin sets PARADISE LOST in both the early modern and the postmodern worlds.