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Lord Byron's Cain : Twelve essays and a text with variants and annotations / Truman Guy Steffan.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Austin : University of Texas Press, [2021]Copyright date: ©1968Description: 1 online resource (528 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781477305102
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 822.7
Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- ERRATA -- CONTENTS -- ILLUSTRATION -- TABLES -- ABBREVIATIONS -- PART I. CHRONICLE, ART, AND THOUGHT -- HISTORY AND ARGUMENT -- THE DEVOUT STOCKADE -- AN APOLOGY FOR REVOLT -- THE RE-CREATION OF GENESIS -- IMAGES FROM PARADISE AND BEYOND -- A MEDLEY OF LANGUAGE -- A METRICAL HERESY -- THE MANUSCRIPT AND THE TEXT -- PART II. TEXT, VARIANTS, AND ANNOTATIONS -- A Text of the Play with Notes and Variants -- ANNOTATIONS -- CAIN AND THE MYSTERIES -- SOME POSSIBLE SOURCES AND PARALLELS FOR ACT II -- PART III. A SURVEY OF Cain CRITICISM -- THE OPINIONS OF BYRON'S SOCIAL AND LITERARY CIRCLE -- THE MAJOR PERIODICALS AND PAMPHLETS (1821-1830) -- THE VICTORIAN APPROACH TO CAIN (1831-1899) -- CAIN IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- INDEX
Summary: Cain has been ranked as one of the two best dramatic poems written in England in the nineteenth century. Because of its religious heterodoxy, which veiled a political iconoclasm, and also because of Byron’s notoriety, Cain stirred up a storm among Tories and clergymen “from Kentish town to Pisa.” From 1821 to 1830 more was printed about its eighteen hundred alarming lines than about the twenty thousand of Don Juan. One solemn Frenchman even translated the work in order to supply his countrymen with a text that he could then rewrite and confute. After the initial controversy, readers began to regard Cain not merely as revolutionary propaganda but as a fictional portrait of common youthful experience: a sequence of aspiration, discontent, uncertainty, confusion, misunderstood isolation, fear, frustration, anger, and finally a rash, inevitable, but futile revolt that led to a future of hopeless regret. Truman Guy Steffan here presents a text, arrived at by collation of the first and several later editions with the original manuscript (presently in the Stark Collection of the Miriam Lutcher Stark Library at the Harry Ransom Center, the University of Texas at Austin). The first eight essays, which comprise Part I, cover a number of literary topics: Byron’s defense of his purposes in Cain and the relevance of his dramatic theory to the poem; the characterization that is an ideological confrontation, a revelation of personal conflict, as well as a rendering of individuals who have an existence independent of the author; the principles that controlled Byron’s absorption and expansion of biblical materials; the integration of the imagery with the dramatic substance; the incongruities of the language; the metrical heterodoxy; and a description of the manuscript and of Byron’s insertions. Part II contains the text of Cain, accompanied by notes on the variants, the manuscript cancellations and additions, certain linguistic details, and the scansion of some unusual verses. Then follow annotations on allusions, sources, and analogues, and on a few passages of the play that have elicited unusual conflict over interpretation. Part III provides a history of Cain criticism, from the opinions of Byron’s social and literary circle and of the major periodicals and pamphlets to the more complicated contribution of the twentieth century. This important work stands not only as a valuable addition to Byron scholarship but also as an illuminating record of the changing critical and cultural attitudes from the early nineteenth century to the 1960s. Steffan has done a remarkable job in bringing together and synthesizing an enormous body of material.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - DeGruyter (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (dgr)9781477305102

Frontmatter -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- ERRATA -- CONTENTS -- ILLUSTRATION -- TABLES -- ABBREVIATIONS -- PART I. CHRONICLE, ART, AND THOUGHT -- HISTORY AND ARGUMENT -- THE DEVOUT STOCKADE -- AN APOLOGY FOR REVOLT -- THE RE-CREATION OF GENESIS -- IMAGES FROM PARADISE AND BEYOND -- A MEDLEY OF LANGUAGE -- A METRICAL HERESY -- THE MANUSCRIPT AND THE TEXT -- PART II. TEXT, VARIANTS, AND ANNOTATIONS -- A Text of the Play with Notes and Variants -- ANNOTATIONS -- CAIN AND THE MYSTERIES -- SOME POSSIBLE SOURCES AND PARALLELS FOR ACT II -- PART III. A SURVEY OF Cain CRITICISM -- THE OPINIONS OF BYRON'S SOCIAL AND LITERARY CIRCLE -- THE MAJOR PERIODICALS AND PAMPHLETS (1821-1830) -- THE VICTORIAN APPROACH TO CAIN (1831-1899) -- CAIN IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- INDEX

restricted access online access with authorization star

http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec

Cain has been ranked as one of the two best dramatic poems written in England in the nineteenth century. Because of its religious heterodoxy, which veiled a political iconoclasm, and also because of Byron’s notoriety, Cain stirred up a storm among Tories and clergymen “from Kentish town to Pisa.” From 1821 to 1830 more was printed about its eighteen hundred alarming lines than about the twenty thousand of Don Juan. One solemn Frenchman even translated the work in order to supply his countrymen with a text that he could then rewrite and confute. After the initial controversy, readers began to regard Cain not merely as revolutionary propaganda but as a fictional portrait of common youthful experience: a sequence of aspiration, discontent, uncertainty, confusion, misunderstood isolation, fear, frustration, anger, and finally a rash, inevitable, but futile revolt that led to a future of hopeless regret. Truman Guy Steffan here presents a text, arrived at by collation of the first and several later editions with the original manuscript (presently in the Stark Collection of the Miriam Lutcher Stark Library at the Harry Ransom Center, the University of Texas at Austin). The first eight essays, which comprise Part I, cover a number of literary topics: Byron’s defense of his purposes in Cain and the relevance of his dramatic theory to the poem; the characterization that is an ideological confrontation, a revelation of personal conflict, as well as a rendering of individuals who have an existence independent of the author; the principles that controlled Byron’s absorption and expansion of biblical materials; the integration of the imagery with the dramatic substance; the incongruities of the language; the metrical heterodoxy; and a description of the manuscript and of Byron’s insertions. Part II contains the text of Cain, accompanied by notes on the variants, the manuscript cancellations and additions, certain linguistic details, and the scansion of some unusual verses. Then follow annotations on allusions, sources, and analogues, and on a few passages of the play that have elicited unusual conflict over interpretation. Part III provides a history of Cain criticism, from the opinions of Byron’s social and literary circle and of the major periodicals and pamphlets to the more complicated contribution of the twentieth century. This important work stands not only as a valuable addition to Byron scholarship but also as an illuminating record of the changing critical and cultural attitudes from the early nineteenth century to the 1960s. Steffan has done a remarkable job in bringing together and synthesizing an enormous body of material.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 26. Apr 2022)