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Gerard Manley Hopkins in Context

Gerard Manley Hopkins in Context

Gerard Manley Hopkins in Context

Martin Dubois, University of Durham
January 2025
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
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9781009192590
$125.00
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    Gerard Manley Hopkins was one of the most innovative British poets of the nineteenth century. This book provides an authoritative guide to the ideas and influences shaping Hopkins's life and writing. Consisting of thirty-eight essays by leading scholars, the book covers topics that have long attracted scholarly attention while also responding to recent critical trends. It considers Hopkins's formal innovations alongside his theological and philosophical ideas. Chapters examine his Victorian aesthetic and cultural contexts as well as the significance of his ecological imagination and response to environmental degradation. Hopkins's poetry was not widely known until the 1930s, and the book closes by discussing the distinctive nature of its reception and influence. Informed by original research but accessibly written, the essays enable a fresh engagement with the originality of Hopkins's writing and thought.

    • Covers the major contexts through which Hopkins's work can be understood, enabling readers to trace in one place the breadth of Hopkins's intellectual and cultural engagements
    • Offers an overview of long-standing areas of scholarly focus while also responding to recent trends in criticism, giving readers a full grasp of the field of Hopkins criticism
    • Provides an accessible guide to a poet often considered difficult because of his linguistic and formal originality, enabling deeper engagement with the densities of Hopkins's writing and thought

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘A very informative and well-conceived text, which sets out to place the poet in his Victorian context… The book is a gift… It’s a dense study, and very compact, but well worth your time and effort, if you would study the genius and beauty of this Victorian poet, a gift for us all.’ Paul Mariani, Journal of Jesuit Studies

    See more reviews

    Product details

    January 2025
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009192590
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Martin Dubois
    • Part I. Places:
    • 1. London Jude V. Nixon
    • 2. Oxford Lesley Higgins
    • 3. Wales Daniel Westover
    • 4. Northern England Martin Dubois
    • 5. Ireland Matthew Campbell
    • Part II. Aesthetic and Cultural Contexts:
    • 6. Visual culture Elizabeth Helsinger
    • 7. Classics R. K. R. Thornton
    • 8. Anglo-Saxonism Joseph Phelan
    • 9. Music Francis O'Gorman
    • Part III. Religious, Theological and Philosophical Contexts:
    • 10. Tractarianism Peter Groves
    • 11. Ancient Greek philosophy A. J. Nickerson
    • 12. The Bible Michael Wheeler
    • 13. Victorian Roman Catholicism Rebekah Lamb
    • 14. Jesuit life and spirituality Philip Endean, S. J.
    • 15. Scholastic theology Trent Pomplun
    • 16. Sacramentalism Bernadette Waterman Ward
    • Part IV. Nature, Science and The Environment:
    • 17. Ecology Joshua King
    • 18. Environmental degradation Julia F. Saville
    • 19. Energy physics Daniel Brown
    • 20. Industry and technology Kirstie Blair
    • Part V. Gender, Sexuality and The Body:
    • 21. Queerness and homosociality Seán Hewitt
    • 22. Masculinity and the labouring body Fraser Riddell
    • 23. Femininity and martyrdom Amanda Paxton
    • 24. Eroticism Duc Dau
    • Part VI. Form, Genre and Poetics:
    • 25. Rhythm Meredith Martin
    • 26. Language Veronica Alfano
    • 27. Address Jane Wright
    • 28. Syntax Andrew Hodgson
    • 29. Rhyme James Williams
    • 30. Ode Bernadette Guthrie
    • 31. Sonnet Michael D. Hurley
    • 32. Letters Summer J. Star
    • 33. Journal prose Vidyan Ravinthiran
    • 34. Sermons Adrian Grafe
    • Part VII. Reception and Influence:
    • 35. Modernist criticism and poetry Finn Fordham
    • 36. Poetic legacies post-1950 Emily Taylor Merriman
    • 37. Theological influence Devon Abts
    • 38. The Anthropocene Daniel Williams
    • Further reading
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Martin Dubois, Jude V. Nixon, Lesley Higgins, Daniel Westover, Matthew Campbell, Elizabeth Helsinger, R. K. R. Thornton, Joseph Phelan, Francis O'Gorman, Peter Groves, A. J. Nickerson, Michael Wheeler, Rebekah Lamb, Philip Endean, S. J. , Trent Pomplun, Bernadette Waterman Ward, Joshua King, Julia F. Saville, Daniel Brown, Kirstie Blair, Seán Hewitt, Fraser Riddell, Amanda Paxton, Duc Dau, Meredith Martin, Veronica Alfano, Jane Wright, Andrew Hodgson, James Williams, Bernadette Guthrie, Michael D. Hurley, Summer J. Star, Vidyan Ravinthiran, Adrian Grafe, Finn Fordham, Emily Taylor Merriman, Devon Abts and Daniel Williams

    • Editor
    • Martin Dubois , University of Durham

      Martin Dubois is Associate Professor in the Department of English Studies at Durham University. His book Gerard Manley Hopkins and the Poetry of Religious Experience was published by Cambridge University Press in 2017. He is the author of the chapter on Hopkins in The Oxford Handbook of Victorian Poetry (2013).