A Companion to Poe Studies
By (Author) Eric W. Carlson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
21st October 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Biography and non-fiction prose
818.309
Hardback
624
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
992g
Best known as the author of poems such as "The Raven" and short stories such as "The Fall of the House of Usher", Edgar Allan Poe is now established as one of the most significant 19th century American writers. Since 1845, when his work was recognised in France by Baudelaire, his critical reception has endured a history of fluctuation and controversy. During the last fifty years, research on Poe has grown so much that it now rivals or possibly exceeds the renaissance interest in Emerson, Melville, and Henry James. His work has been adapted for popular consumption through several films, and early editions of his works, printed in small quantities, continue to command high prices. This reference companion, the third in a series with others on Melville and Henry James, is a guide to the tremendous amount of scholarship Poe has generated. Through chapters written by expert contributors, this volume reviews and represents Poe biography, criticism, aesthetics, philosophy and influence. The first section of the book includes chapters on Poe's life and discusses the problems confronting Poe's biographers. The second section primarily offers textual criticism of his individual works, while the third and fourth sections treat broad topics related to his philosophical views and aesthetic theory. The fifth section consists of chapters on the legacy of Poe as a world author and his lasting influence on literature, popular culture, and fine arts. Chapters include extensive documentation, and a bibliography at the end of the volume lists the most significant resources for the study of Poe.
The tone of the volume as a whole is that of the responsible critical/historical scholar who has taken into account the intricacies of literary influence, textual genesis, biographical detail, and extant documentation in order to arrive at sound conclusion....The amount of factual information gleaned by the reader seeking to become familiar with what we know of Poe is rewarded repeatedly by each essay.-Extrapolation
This reference companion...is a valuable guide to the scholarship and criticism that the enormous interest in Poe's life and work has generated, especially during the last fifty years.-Nineteenth-Century Literature
This volume is extraordinarily useful and valuable. It must be available to every serious student of the many sides of Edgar Allan Poe.-Journal of American Culture
"This reference companion...is a valuable guide to the scholarship and criticism that the enormous interest in Poe's life and work has generated, especially during the last fifty years."-Nineteenth-Century Literature
"This volume is extraordinarily useful and valuable. It must be available to every serious student of the many sides of Edgar Allan Poe."-Journal of American Culture
"The tone of the volume as a whole is that of the responsible critical/historical scholar who has taken into account the intricacies of literary influence, textual genesis, biographical detail, and extant documentation in order to arrive at sound conclusion....The amount of factual information gleaned by the reader seeking to become familiar with what we know of Poe is rewarded repeatedly by each essay."-Extrapolation
ERIC W. CARLSON is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Connecticut, Storrs. He was a founding member and first president of the Poe Studies Association, whose newsletter he cofounded and coedited with John E. Reilly for more than a decade. He has edited several books on Poe, and his Poe essays and lectures have been widely published.