T.S. Eliot's Bleistein Poems: Uses of Literary Allusion in Burbank with a Baedeker: Bleistein with a Cigar and DirgeInternational Scholars Publications, 2000 - Počet stran: 400 Patricia Sloane's study is a detailed reassessment of two of the poet's most provocative works that examines Eliot's allusions and larger purpose. In this close reading of the two poems in which Bleistein appears, Sloane shows that Burbank is an intricate derivation of Dante's Inferno. |
Obsah
FOREWORD BY SHYAMAL BAGCHEE | 9 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 17 |
MONEY IN FURS MONEY IN NONFERROUS METALS I | 55 |
Autorská práva | |
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T.S. Eliot's Bleistein Poems: Uses of Literary Allusion in "Burbank with a ... Patricia Sloane Náhled není k dispozici. - 2000 |
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actually Alfred Alfred Prufrock allusion Anthony Julius antisemitic Baedeker barge beast Bible Biblical Bleistein Browning's Burbank's epigraph Canaletto capitalized Christ Christian Church cigar Commedia Dante Dante's David Dirge Dorian drowned Eliot borrows Eliot's poems Eliot's reader Eliot's Sunday Morning epigraph epigraph to Burbank episode Eugenides Ezra Ezra Pound Ferdinand Gautier Gerontion Greek Guggenheim heaven Hebrew hell Henry hippo Hippopotamus identified includes Inferno James Jew's Jewish Jews John John Ruskin Joyce Joyce's Julius King Klein knees Lamb Leopold Bloom letters lines literary Little Review London lust means mentioned merchant modern Mond money in furs narrator never Old Testament painting passage perhaps Phlebas Phoenician play poet potamus Princess Volupine Prufrock quatrains question recalls Ruskin Saint says scene Semite seven Shakespeare's Sibyl slime Sunday Morning Service Sweeney T. S. Eliot tion Tiresias Titanic Ulysses Venetian Venice verse Waste Land whore of Babylon word