Tennyson.(literary studies on Alfred Lord Tennyson)(Bibliography)

From: Victorian Poetry | Date: September 22, 2007| Author: Hughes, Linda K. | Copyright information

Books by Kathryn Ledbetter and Kirstie Blair form the most notable contributions to Tennyson studies in 2006. In Tennyson and Victorian Periodicals: Commodities in Context (Ashgate, 2007 [released December 2006]), Kathryn Ledbetter examines sixty-two poems authorized by Tennyson to appear in thirty-two periodicals. Ledbetter not only takes up material ignored in earlier publishing histories by Edgar Shannon (Tennyson and the Reviewers, 1952) and June Steffenson Hagen (Tennyson and ...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Tennyson's Poetics of Melancholy and the Imperial Imagination.
Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 ; Ever since Arthur Hallam's early review of Alfred, Lord Tennyson's Poems, critics have recognized that Tennyson's early work attempts to establish a kind of poetic authority, and that its characteristic power is grounded in melancholy. The best recent criticism, by Herbert Tucker and Isobel
Protesting success: Tennyson's "indecent exposure" in the periodicals.
Victorian Poetry ; FIVE POEMS IN SEVEN PERIODICALS COMPRISED TENNYSON'S ENTIRE LIST OF publications for the year 1868: The Victim in Good Words (January 1); The Spiteful Letter in Once a Week (January 4); Wages in Macmillan's Magazine (February); 1865-1866 in Every Saturday (U.S., February 22) and Good Words (March);
THE TALE OF TENNYSON SMALL TOWN HANGS TOUGH
Evansville Courier & Press (2007-Current) ; TENNYSON - Town Clerk Lisa Wyatt is convinced the average person in Evansville couldn't find her Warrick County hometown without a road map. "And we're just one county over, for goodness sake," she says, laughing. This means they likely don't know about the 1926 fire that destroyed much of
Finding the Modern Frames in Tennyson's Final Classical Poems.(English poet Alfred Lord Tennyson)(Critical Essay)
Philological Quarterly ; As a young child, Alfred Tennyson received an education in Greek and Latin literature that was unusually rigorous, even by the standards of the early nineteenth century. In the years before he was sent to Louth Grammar School and later to Trinity College, Cambridge, Tennyson's father gave his son a
Tennyson High deserves respect
Oakland Tribune ; 'BUT Mama, they want me to fail -- they want me to get low scores like the kids at Tennyson." Wait -- did she just say "like the kids at Tennyson"? Did she label me and other Tennyson students as failures? This was my reaction to a comment made by one very emotional student at a school board