The Oxford Handbook of the Elegy. Edited by Karen Weisman

Critical interest in the elegy has adopted a newly urgent tone in the 21st century. Once suspected to be an outmoded and redundant genre by critics writing at the end of the previous century, elegy has resurfaced as a way into many current preoccupations within literary studies, not least the relati...

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Главный автор: Mason, Emma (Автор)
Формат: Электронный ресурс Review
Язык:Английский
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Опубликовано: Oxford University Press 2013
В: Literature and theology
Год: 2013, Том: 27, Выпуск: 1, Страницы: 123-126
Рецензировано:The Oxford handbook of the elegy (Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2010) (Mason, Emma)
The Oxford handbook of the elegy (Oxford [u.a.] : Oxford Univ. Press, 2010) (Mason, Emma)
Другие ключевые слова:B Рецензия
Online-ссылка: Volltext (JSTOR)
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Итог:Critical interest in the elegy has adopted a newly urgent tone in the 21st century. Once suspected to be an outmoded and redundant genre by critics writing at the end of the previous century, elegy has resurfaced as a way into many current preoccupations within literary studies, not least the relationship between religion and literature. A return to questions of form and prosody, coupled with a renewed interest in questions of emotion, notably grief, bereavement and mourning, signals the elegy as a way into addressing ideas otherwise difficult to articulate and explore. Elegy has thus come to mean ‘elegiac’ for many critics, a word that covers a variety of forms and discourses—inclusive of the ‘prose elegy’—in addition to its primary sense as a poem of lament or funeral song.
ISSN:1477-4623
Второстепенные работы:Enthalten in: Literature and theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1093/litthe/frs009