Byron\u27s late poem The Island: or, Christian and His Comrades (1823) has not proven especially congenial to modern sensibility; relatively little has been written about it, and most critics have tended to dismiss it as a regrettable episode in the Romantic idealization of the Noble Savage
Crossing “Dark Barriers”: intertextuality and dialogue between Lord Byron and Sir Walter Scott.This...
Firstly in digression Byron presents a national reality which gradually displaces his cherished cosm...
28 pages“The Concept of Byrony” examines Kierkegaard’s lyrical relation to Lord Byron. As an alterna...
Byron\u27s late poem The Island: or, Christian and His Comrades (1823) has not proven especially con...
Byron's major poems, such as Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Don Juan, and others, are unmistakably flav...
This thesis will examine how the concepts of gender and nation were inextricably linked for Byron, a...
“ \u27Columbus of the moral seas\u27: Byronic Sexuality and Relationship to Place follows what Byro...
The subject of this article is the vicious public dispute between Southey and Byron—the well-known a...
This thesis examines the conscious amalgamation of conflicting forms in Byron’s verse, and how these...
Multiple forms and discourses of otherness emerge in Byron’s life and writing. This book focuses on ...
I will suggest that had the history of Christian metaphysics taken a different course than the one i...
Includes bibliographical references.Edward Said's notice of 'orientalism' is explored with reference...
Robinson, Charles E.Following George Gordon, Lord Byron across Britain, Europe, and the Eastern Medi...
In this essay and another to appear in the next issue, the writer attempts to examine the nature of ...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Illinois, 1911.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 1...
Crossing “Dark Barriers”: intertextuality and dialogue between Lord Byron and Sir Walter Scott.This...
Firstly in digression Byron presents a national reality which gradually displaces his cherished cosm...
28 pages“The Concept of Byrony” examines Kierkegaard’s lyrical relation to Lord Byron. As an alterna...
Byron\u27s late poem The Island: or, Christian and His Comrades (1823) has not proven especially con...
Byron's major poems, such as Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Don Juan, and others, are unmistakably flav...
This thesis will examine how the concepts of gender and nation were inextricably linked for Byron, a...
“ \u27Columbus of the moral seas\u27: Byronic Sexuality and Relationship to Place follows what Byro...
The subject of this article is the vicious public dispute between Southey and Byron—the well-known a...
This thesis examines the conscious amalgamation of conflicting forms in Byron’s verse, and how these...
Multiple forms and discourses of otherness emerge in Byron’s life and writing. This book focuses on ...
I will suggest that had the history of Christian metaphysics taken a different course than the one i...
Includes bibliographical references.Edward Said's notice of 'orientalism' is explored with reference...
Robinson, Charles E.Following George Gordon, Lord Byron across Britain, Europe, and the Eastern Medi...
In this essay and another to appear in the next issue, the writer attempts to examine the nature of ...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Illinois, 1911.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 1...
Crossing “Dark Barriers”: intertextuality and dialogue between Lord Byron and Sir Walter Scott.This...
Firstly in digression Byron presents a national reality which gradually displaces his cherished cosm...
28 pages“The Concept of Byrony” examines Kierkegaard’s lyrical relation to Lord Byron. As an alterna...