The Life in the Sonnets
By (Author) Professor David Fuller
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
17th February 2011
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
Literary studies: poetry and poets
822.33
Hardback
134
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
"The ambitious project of the Shakespeare NOW series is to bridge the gap between scholarly thinking and a public audience' and public audience and scholarly thinking'. Scholars are encouraged to write in a way accessible to a general readership and readers to rise to the challenge and not be afraid of new ideas and the adventure they offer. There are other bridges the series is ambitious to cross: formal, political or theoretical boundaries' - history and philosophy, theory, and performance." English Vol. 58, 2009
This is a passionate book: a book about passion in literature, passion for literature, and passion in critical writing. David Fuller reminds us of the emotional and sensual pleasures of poetry and reintroduces terms such as "enjoyment", "engagement" and "feeling" to our critical vocabularies. This book will deepen the reader's engagement not just with Shakespeare's sonnets but with all kinds of art - written, acoustic and visual - as Fuller shows us how to bring personal experience to bear on critical analysis.' -- Laurie Maguire, Professor of English Literature at at Magdalen College, University of Oxford, UK
Featured in the Times Higher Education Literature Textbook round-up.
This slim and easy-to-read volumeconcludes with a brief coda that pulls things together quite nicely. -- Rudolph P. Almasy, West Virginia University * Sixteenth Century Journal *
David Fuller is Emeritus Professor of English in the University of Durham, UK. From 2002 to 2007 he was the University's Orator. He trained as a musicologist, and has written on a range of literary topics from Medieval to Modern. He is the author of Blake's Heroic Argument (1988), James Joyce's 'Ulysses' (1992), Signs of Grace (with David Brown, 1995). He has edited Tamburlaine the Great (1998) for the Clarendon Press complete works of Marlowe, co-edited (with Patricia Waugh) The Arts and Sciences of Criticism (OUP, 1999), and edited Blake: Selected Poetry and Prose (Longman, 2000, 2008).