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Reading Byron
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Perhaps no great poet, in any language, has suffered more than Byron from being merely read about rather than actually read. As Bernard Beatty remarks in his introduction to this important collection of essays, the popular conception of ‘Byron’ still often approximates to ‘Rupert Everett with a limp’.
Reading Byron is the product and summation of nearly sixty years devoted to studying and teaching his poetry. It argues that, far from being ‘mad, bad and dangerous to know’, Byron is serious, ethically orientated and rewarding to read. The book is in three parts: Poetry – Life – Politics. Five new essays have been written especially for the first and largest section, which gives original re-readings of Byron’s major works. Beatty, who won the International Byron Societies’ Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019, has then selected three of his lively lectures on unappreciated aspects of Byron the man, and three pithy essays on Byron as a complex, if not systematic, political thinker.
While Beatty does not question the pre-eminent status of the ‘bright’ Don Juan, devoting a chapter to an unconventional reading of its final cantos, he argues powerfully that nineteenth-century readers, who responded on an unprecedented scale to the forceful poetic structures of the ‘dark’ Byron in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, The Tales, Manfred, and Cain, were right to do so. Reading Byron, introduced by the great American scholar Jerome McGann, is itself essential reading for any student or lover of Romantic poetry.
Title: Reading Byron
Description:
Perhaps no great poet, in any language, has suffered more than Byron from being merely read about rather than actually read.
As Bernard Beatty remarks in his introduction to this important collection of essays, the popular conception of ‘Byron’ still often approximates to ‘Rupert Everett with a limp’.
Reading Byron is the product and summation of nearly sixty years devoted to studying and teaching his poetry.
It argues that, far from being ‘mad, bad and dangerous to know’, Byron is serious, ethically orientated and rewarding to read.
The book is in three parts: Poetry – Life – Politics.
Five new essays have been written especially for the first and largest section, which gives original re-readings of Byron’s major works.
Beatty, who won the International Byron Societies’ Lifetime Achievement Award in 2019, has then selected three of his lively lectures on unappreciated aspects of Byron the man, and three pithy essays on Byron as a complex, if not systematic, political thinker.
While Beatty does not question the pre-eminent status of the ‘bright’ Don Juan, devoting a chapter to an unconventional reading of its final cantos, he argues powerfully that nineteenth-century readers, who responded on an unprecedented scale to the forceful poetic structures of the ‘dark’ Byron in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, The Tales, Manfred, and Cain, were right to do so.
Reading Byron, introduced by the great American scholar Jerome McGann, is itself essential reading for any student or lover of Romantic poetry.
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