Myth 15: The Keswick rapist (English)
- New search for: Wu, Duncan
- New search for: Wu, Duncan
In:
30 Great Myths about the Romantics
;
124-131
;
2015
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ISBN:
- Article/Chapter (Book) / Electronic Resource
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Title:Myth 15: The Keswick rapist
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Contributors:Wu, Duncan ( author )
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Published in:30 Great Myths about the Romantics ; 124-131
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Publisher:
- New search for: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
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Place of publication:Chichester, UK
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Publication date:2015-05-18
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Size:8 pages
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ISBN:
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DOI:
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Type of media:Article/Chapter (Book)
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Type of material:Electronic Resource
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Language:English
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Keywords:
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Source:
Table of contents eBook
The tables of contents are generated automatically and are based on the data records of the individual contributions available in the index of the TIB portal. The display of the Tables of Contents may therefore be incomplete.
- 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