Myth 24: Keats was killed by a review (Englisch)
- Neue Suche nach: Wu, Duncan
- Neue Suche nach: Wu, Duncan
In:
30 Great Myths about the Romantics
;
203-211
;
2015
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ISBN:
- Aufsatz/Kapitel (Buch) / Elektronische Ressource
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Titel:Myth 24: Keats was killed by a review
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Beteiligte:Wu, Duncan ( Autor:in )
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Erschienen in:30 Great Myths about the Romantics ; 203-211
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Verlag:
- Neue Suche nach: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
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Erscheinungsort:Chichester, UK
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Erscheinungsdatum:18.05.2015
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Format / Umfang:9 pages
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ISBN:
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DOI:
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Medientyp:Aufsatz/Kapitel (Buch)
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Format:Elektronische Ressource
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Sprache:Englisch
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Schlagwörter:
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Datenquelle:
Inhaltsverzeichnis E-Book
Die Inhaltsverzeichnisse werden automatisch erzeugt und basieren auf den im Index des TIB-Portals verfügbaren Einzelnachweisen der enthaltenen Beiträge. Die Anzeige der Inhaltsverzeichnisse kann daher unvollständig oder lückenhaft sein.
- 1
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Myth 1: Romanticism began in 1798Wu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 8
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Myth 2: English Romanticism was a reaction against the EnlightenmentWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 17
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Myth 3: The Romantics hated the sciencesWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 29
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Myth 4: The Romantics repudiated the Augustans, especially Pope and DrydenWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 40
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Myth 5: The Romantic poets were misunderstood, solitary geniusesWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 49
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Myth 6: Romantic poems were produced by spontaneous inspirationWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 58
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Myth 7: Blake was madWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 66
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Myth 8: Blake wrote ‘Jerusalem’ as an anthem to EnglishnessWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 74
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Myth 9: Lyrical Ballads (1798) was designed to illustrate ‘the two cardinal points of poetry’, using poems about everyday life and the supernaturalWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 82
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Myth 10: Wordsworth's Preface to Lyrical Ballads was a manifesto for the Romantic revolutionWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 90
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Myth 11: Wordsworth had an incestuous relationship with his sisterWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 98
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Myth 12: Tory WordsworthWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 108
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Myth 13: The person from PorlockWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 115
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Myth 14: Jane Austen had an incestuous relationship with her sisterWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 124
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Myth 15: The Keswick rapistWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 132
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Myth 16: Byron had an affair with his sisterWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 140
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Myth 17: Byron was a great lover of womenWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 149
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Myth 18: Byron was a champion of democracyWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 156
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Myth 19: Byron was a ‘noble warrior’ who died fighting for Greek freedomWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 166
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Myth 20: Shelley committed suicide by sailboatWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 175
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Myth 21: Shelley's heartWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 185
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Myth 22: Keats's ‘humble origins’Wu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 193
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Myth 23: Keats was gayWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 203
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Myth 24: Keats was killed by a reviewWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 212
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Myth 25: Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote FrankensteinWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 220
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Myth 26: Women writers were an exploited underclass – unknown, unloved, and unpaidWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 232
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Myth 27: The Romantics were atheistsWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 242
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Myth 28: The Romantics were counter‐cultural drug usersWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 251
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Myth 29: The Romantics practised free love on principleWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 261
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Myth 30: The Romantics were the rock stars of their dayWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 270
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CodaWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 277
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Further ReadingWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- 283
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A Note on Monetary ValuesWu, Duncan et al. | 2015
- i
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FrontmatterWu, Duncan et al. | 2015