Shelley and the Romantic Imagination: A Psychological StudyUniversity of Delaware Press, 2007 - 359 Seiten Shelley was the most extreme and controversial of the English Romantics, and this book studies the most romantic element in his vision and in Romanticism in general: the attempt to bring to life imaginings of ideal eros and of a human paradise. Using concepts from Freud and such later psychoanalytic writers as Geza Roheim, Heinz Hartmann, Ernst Kris, Heinz Kohut, and Margaret Mahler, Shelley and the Romantic Imagination analyzes an interplay in Shelley between a regressive impulse to return to union with the mother and an aggressive, progressive impulse toward a separate, autonomous ego. |
Inhalt
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Preface | 15 |
Adams Dream | 23 |
Urheberrecht | |
10 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Shelley and the Romantic Imagination: A Psychological Study Thomas R. Frosch Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2007 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Aeschylus aggression Alastor appears Asia associated authority beautiful becomes begins brings calls castration chariot child comes dark death deep Demogorgon describes desire divine double dream Earth evil expresses eyes fall fantasy father feeling female figure final fire follow force Freud Furies gives heart hero human ideal imagination impulse Jupiter language Laon and Cythna light lines live lost mind Moon mother moves myth narrator nature notes object oceanic once original Paradise passage passion play poem Poet poetic poetry presence Press primal Prometheus Unbound Queen Mab quest questions regression Romantic Rousseau says scene secret seeks seems sense sexual shadows Shape Shelley Shelley's Shelleyan speaks Spirit star story suggests takes tells theme things thou thought tion trans transformation tries Triumph turns University veil vision voice wish Wordsworth writes wrote