Join Books.org — it's free

English Poetry - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Criticism, English Fiction & Prose Literature - 19th Century - Literary Criticism, English Poetry - 19th Century - Literary Criticism
Elegy For An Age by John D Rosenberg β€” book cover

Elegy For An Age

by John D Rosenberg
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

This rich and elegant work describes how the unsettled cultural climate provided fertile soil for the flourishing of elegy. John Rosenberg shows how the phenomenon of elegy pervaded the writing of the period, tracing it through the voices of individuals from Carlyle, Tennyson, Darwin and Ruskin, to Swinburne, Pater, Dickens and Hopkins. Finally, he turns from particular elegists to a common experience that touched them all - the displacement of the older idea of the earthly city as a New Jerusalem by the rise of a new image of the Victorian city as an industrial Inferno, a wasteland of sprawling towns and of rivers so polluted they caught on fire.

About the Author, John D Rosenberg

John D Rosenberg is William Peterfield Trent Professor of English at Columbia University of New York. He has received numerous awards and fellowships, including American Council of Learned Societies, Guggenheim and NEH fellowships. Among many works and editions, he has written The Darkening Glass, on Ruskin (Columbia University Press, 1961); and Carlyle and the Burden of History (Harvard University Press, 1985).

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

From the Publisher

'An inventive and spirited book, with many brilliant pages which any student of Victorian culture would do well to ponder.' β€”Roger Ebbatson, 'The Tennyson Research Bulletin'

 'John D Rosenberg devotes his principal energies to an exploration of the elegy as an instrument for the expression of personal loss.' β€”'Dickens Quarterly'

 ''Elegy for An Age' is best read as a series of intense engagements with the literary past that also constitute a retrospective of a distinguished career.' β€”Paul Lincoln Sawyer, 'Modern Philology'

'Recommended.' β€”R. E. Wiehe, emeritus, University of Massachusetts at Lowell, in β€˜Choice’

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2000
Publisher
Anthem Press
Pages
304
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781843311546

Similar books