The Cambridge Companion to Byron

Front Cover
Drummond Bone
Cambridge University Press, 2004 M11 18
Byron's life and work have fascinated readers around the world for two hundred years, but it is the complex interaction between his art and his politics, beliefs and sexuality that has attracted so many modern critics and students. In three sections devoted to the historical, textual and literary contexts of Byron's life and times, these specially commissioned essays by a range of eminent Byron scholars provide a compelling picture of the diversity of Byron's writings. The essays cover topics such as Byron's interest in the East, his relationship to the publishing world, his attitudes to gender, his use of Shakespeare and eighteenth-century literature, and his acute fit in a post-modernist world. This Companion provides an invaluable resource for students and scholars, including a chronology and a guide to further reading.
 

Contents

Acknowledgements
Byrons life and his biographers
Byrons European reception
Byron and the business of publishing
Byrons politics
Childe Harold I and II and the Tales
Childe Harold II and the polemic
Alan Rawes
Alan Richardson
The Vision of Judgment and the visions of author
Byrons prose
Byrons lyric poetry
Byron and Shakespeare
Byron postmodernism and intertextuality
Select bibliography
Index

Byron and the theatre

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About the author (2004)

Drummond Bone is Vice-Chancellor of the University of Liverpool and co-editor of Romanticism.

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