Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/008888127/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 34 of
34
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b12476793.
- catalog coverage "Middle East In literature.".
- catalog created "c2002.".
- catalog date "2001".
- catalog date "c2002.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c2002.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p.[202]-214) and index.".
- catalog description "To instruct without displeasing: Percy Shelley's The Revolt of Islam and Robert Southey's Thalaba the Destroyer -- Instruction in The Revolt of Islam -- Tyranny: the Orient's chief export -- Tyranny's comrades: religion and sexism -- Orientalism and Shelley's poetics -- Morals vs. materials: instruction and pleasure in Thalaba the Destroyer -- The desert, Islam: foreignness as a hermeneutic category -- Foreignness general and particular: character as archetype -- Extremes: too many notes? -- Southey and his readers: delighted, informed, or distressed -- Representation and the "Arabesque ornament" -- Representing, misrepresenting, not representing: Victor Hugo's Les Orientales and Alfred de Musset's "Namouna" -- Hugo's preface: poetic ideals and the Orient as subject -- "La Douleur du pacha": the Orient as origin or as end -- "Adieux de l'hotesse arabe": stasis -- "Novembre": returning to Paris, the self, and mimesis -- Hugo's critics: E.J. Chetelat -- George Gordon Byron's Don Juan: "But what's reality?" -- "Namouna": fragmentary representation -- No narrative, no representation -- Authority, referents, and representation -- The Middle East: "impossible a decrire" -- Orientalist poetics and the nature of the Middle East -- William Wordsworth and the nature of the Middle East -- Felicia Heman's ambivalence -- Truth in illustrating Robert Southey and Thomas Moore -- Leconte de Lisle: "Le Desert," "le desert du monde" -- Theophile Gautier: the composite desert -- "In deserto": European nature in absentia.".
- catalog extent "vi, 220 p.;".
- catalog hasFormat "Orientalist poetics.".
- catalog identifier "0754603040 (alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Orientalist poetics.".
- catalog isPartOf "Nineteenth century (Aldershot, England)".
- catalog isPartOf "[The nineteenth century]".
- catalog issued "2001".
- catalog issued "c2002.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Aldershot, Hants ; Burlington, Vt. : Ashgate,".
- catalog relation "Orientalist poetics.".
- catalog spatial "Middle East In literature.".
- catalog subject "821/.8093256 21".
- catalog subject "English poetry 19th century History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "English poetry Asian influences.".
- catalog subject "English poetry Oriental influences.".
- catalog subject "French poetry 19th century History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "French poetry Asian influences.".
- catalog subject "French poetry Oriental influences.".
- catalog subject "Islam in literature.".
- catalog subject "Islamic civilization in literature.".
- catalog subject "Orientalism.".
- catalog subject "PR129.M54 H33 2002".
- catalog tableOfContents "To instruct without displeasing: Percy Shelley's The Revolt of Islam and Robert Southey's Thalaba the Destroyer -- Instruction in The Revolt of Islam -- Tyranny: the Orient's chief export -- Tyranny's comrades: religion and sexism -- Orientalism and Shelley's poetics -- Morals vs. materials: instruction and pleasure in Thalaba the Destroyer -- The desert, Islam: foreignness as a hermeneutic category -- Foreignness general and particular: character as archetype -- Extremes: too many notes? -- Southey and his readers: delighted, informed, or distressed -- Representation and the "Arabesque ornament" -- Representing, misrepresenting, not representing: Victor Hugo's Les Orientales and Alfred de Musset's "Namouna" -- Hugo's preface: poetic ideals and the Orient as subject -- "La Douleur du pacha": the Orient as origin or as end -- "Adieux de l'hotesse arabe": stasis -- "Novembre": returning to Paris, the self, and mimesis -- Hugo's critics: E.J. Chetelat -- George Gordon Byron's Don Juan: "But what's reality?" -- "Namouna": fragmentary representation -- No narrative, no representation -- Authority, referents, and representation -- The Middle East: "impossible a decrire" -- Orientalist poetics and the nature of the Middle East -- William Wordsworth and the nature of the Middle East -- Felicia Heman's ambivalence -- Truth in illustrating Robert Southey and Thomas Moore -- Leconte de Lisle: "Le Desert," "le desert du monde" -- Theophile Gautier: the composite desert -- "In deserto": European nature in absentia.".
- catalog title "Orientalist poetics : the Islamic Middle East in nineteenth-century English and French poetry / Emily A. Haddad.".
- catalog type "text".