Includes bibliographical references (p. 163-166).In "Kubla Khan" and its prose introduction, Coleridge offers repeated examples of conscious efforts to gather up the loose ends of history, both globally and personally, in political and spiritual contexts. "The Pains of Sleep" depicts personal suffering as inextricably linked with the act of constituting self and others in relationships determined by the act of representation itself after the manner exemplified in Coleridge's philosophical and poetic works. This depiction is especially important in light of the convergence since Coleridge's time of views as different as Japanese Buddhism and Continental philosophy. West or East, philosophy seeks to represent the human subject as accounting f...
[ https://plus.google.com/108060242686103906748/posts/cwvdB6mK3J6 ] The phenomenal description on ow...
Recent work on the fragment, prompted in part by the disruption of totalities in contemporary theori...
The article deals with spiritual progress of S.T. Coleridge from his youthful interest in the follow...
In the Romantic era, the concept of the Self changes its meaning. There is a shift from the traditio...
The poem "Kubla Khan" is quite inexplicable. It is full of ambiguity and seemingly bizarre implicati...
Although "Kubla Khan" has been the source of a variety of critical interpretations, the poem apparen...
S. T. Coleridge's religious thought may be compared with the 'Prison' etchings of Piranesi, whe...
Claude Welch, the distinguished historian of nineteenth-century religious thought, once declared tha...
This dissertation demonstrates how Samuel Taylor Coleridge provides a unique vision of reality in wh...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 78-81).The mystical nature of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's ...
grantor: University of TorontoColeridge constructed his later prose works through an unusu...
For the first time, a monographic study of Coleridge\u2019s work extensively uncovers the connection...
This study examines the motif of the Fallen World in Coleridge’s major poems The Ancient Mariner, Ch...
For many readers 'Kubla Khan: or, A Vision in a Dream. A Fragment' (the full title is important) has...
The problem with which this study is concerned is analysis of the criticism of Samuel Taylor Colerid...
[ https://plus.google.com/108060242686103906748/posts/cwvdB6mK3J6 ] The phenomenal description on ow...
Recent work on the fragment, prompted in part by the disruption of totalities in contemporary theori...
The article deals with spiritual progress of S.T. Coleridge from his youthful interest in the follow...
In the Romantic era, the concept of the Self changes its meaning. There is a shift from the traditio...
The poem "Kubla Khan" is quite inexplicable. It is full of ambiguity and seemingly bizarre implicati...
Although "Kubla Khan" has been the source of a variety of critical interpretations, the poem apparen...
S. T. Coleridge's religious thought may be compared with the 'Prison' etchings of Piranesi, whe...
Claude Welch, the distinguished historian of nineteenth-century religious thought, once declared tha...
This dissertation demonstrates how Samuel Taylor Coleridge provides a unique vision of reality in wh...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 78-81).The mystical nature of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's ...
grantor: University of TorontoColeridge constructed his later prose works through an unusu...
For the first time, a monographic study of Coleridge\u2019s work extensively uncovers the connection...
This study examines the motif of the Fallen World in Coleridge’s major poems The Ancient Mariner, Ch...
For many readers 'Kubla Khan: or, A Vision in a Dream. A Fragment' (the full title is important) has...
The problem with which this study is concerned is analysis of the criticism of Samuel Taylor Colerid...
[ https://plus.google.com/108060242686103906748/posts/cwvdB6mK3J6 ] The phenomenal description on ow...
Recent work on the fragment, prompted in part by the disruption of totalities in contemporary theori...
The article deals with spiritual progress of S.T. Coleridge from his youthful interest in the follow...