My thesis focuses on William Blake\u27s challenge of the conventional Christianity of his time and his questioning of what he perceived as the hypocritical moral codes of the Church of England. Blake blames these codes for dominating and imprisoning humanity by preventing individuals from acting through their use of the imagination. For Blake, the imagination does not simply imply a creation of the imaginative faculty; instead, it refers to an imagination that is transforming and that becomes a measure of salvation and deliverance from the man-made codes that imprison humanity. These codes, while originating from and propagated by the Church of England, were also the social codes, generally accepted as the conventional morality of common s...
This thesis examines William Blake’s engagement with Western esoteric tradition, specifically the be...
PhDThis dissertation examines the meaning of law in Blake's work. I argue that Blake's poetry inter...
This thesis examines the ways literary critics have interpreted William Blake\u27s The Marriage of H...
This thesis project discusses William Blake’s work and observes the destructive nature of capitalist...
This Undergraduate Thesis enters the scholarly conversation regarding William Blake and psychoanalyt...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 56-57)This study explores Blake's early delineation of\ud...
This thesis gives an account of the ideas about pity and anger in Blake's poetry from Poetical Sketc...
This thesis closely examines William Blake’s attitudes towards women and compares and contrasts the ...
In his works, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell and Songs of Innocence and Experience, William Blake e...
Blake’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience are a much studied part of the English canon, and for g...
William Blake\u27s final epic poem, The Song of Jerusalem, consists of two textual narratives: the v...
In order to understand Blake’s purpose for writing, the reader must firstly understand the environme...
William Blake is often popularly recalled as a proponent of “free love” who equated unrestrained de...
(Statement of Responsibility) by Sam Conrad(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2020R...
The purpose of this project is to examine the artistic vision of William Blake as well as his impact...
This thesis examines William Blake’s engagement with Western esoteric tradition, specifically the be...
PhDThis dissertation examines the meaning of law in Blake's work. I argue that Blake's poetry inter...
This thesis examines the ways literary critics have interpreted William Blake\u27s The Marriage of H...
This thesis project discusses William Blake’s work and observes the destructive nature of capitalist...
This Undergraduate Thesis enters the scholarly conversation regarding William Blake and psychoanalyt...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 56-57)This study explores Blake's early delineation of\ud...
This thesis gives an account of the ideas about pity and anger in Blake's poetry from Poetical Sketc...
This thesis closely examines William Blake’s attitudes towards women and compares and contrasts the ...
In his works, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell and Songs of Innocence and Experience, William Blake e...
Blake’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience are a much studied part of the English canon, and for g...
William Blake\u27s final epic poem, The Song of Jerusalem, consists of two textual narratives: the v...
In order to understand Blake’s purpose for writing, the reader must firstly understand the environme...
William Blake is often popularly recalled as a proponent of “free love” who equated unrestrained de...
(Statement of Responsibility) by Sam Conrad(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2020R...
The purpose of this project is to examine the artistic vision of William Blake as well as his impact...
This thesis examines William Blake’s engagement with Western esoteric tradition, specifically the be...
PhDThis dissertation examines the meaning of law in Blake's work. I argue that Blake's poetry inter...
This thesis examines the ways literary critics have interpreted William Blake\u27s The Marriage of H...