Literary Transmission and Authority
Dryden and Other Writers
Earl Miner editor Jennifer Brady editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:23rd Nov '06
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This 1993 book looks at Dryden's literary relationships and implications for questions of literary reception, influence and intertextuality.
Dryden defined himself as a writer in relation to other writers, and in doing so was something of a pioneer professional man of letters. This 1993 book looks at Dryden's literary relationships and implications for questions of literary reception, influence and intertextuality, as well as for the reputation and context of Dryden himself.Dryden's writings are studded with names, conspicuously those of his literary predecessors and contemporaries. He defined himself as a writer in relation to other writers, and in doing so was something of a pioneer professional man of letters: poet, playwright, critic, prose stylist, England's foremost verse translator, the first literary historian to provide a conception of periods, and what would now be termed a comparatist. This 1993 book looks at Dryden's literary relationships with Ben Jonson and with French authors (notably Corneille), at issues raised by the work thought to be his greatest by Romantic and contemporary readers, Fables Ancient and Modern; and at Samuel Johnson's definition of Dryden, whose biography in Johnson's Lives was the author's favourite. The book has implications for questions of literary reception, influence and intertextuality, as well as for the reputation and context of Dryden himself.
ISBN: 9780521032018
Dimensions: 228mm x 149mm x 10mm
Weight: 268g
176 pages