John Keats

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, 1987 M03 12 - 172 pages
This book offers a revaluation of Keats' major poetry. It reveals how Keats' work is both an oblique criticism of the dominant attitudes to literature, sexuality, religion and politics in his period, and a powerful critique of the claims of the imagination. For all that he shares the optimistic humanism of progressives like Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt, and Shelley, Keats nevertheless questions the sufficiency of either Art or Beauty. Professor Barnard shows how the notorious attack on Keats as a Cockney poet was motivated by class and political bias. He analyses the problems facing Keats as a second-generation Romantic, his continuing difficulty in finding an appropriate style for 'Poesy', and his uncertain judgement of his own work. The ambiguities and stresses evident in the poetry's treatment of women and sexual love are seen to reflect divisions in Keats and his society. The maturing use of myth from Poems (1817) to The Fall of Hyperion, and the achievement of the major odes are set in relation to Keats' whole career.

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Contents

An early nineteenthcentury poet
1
Energy and Voluptuousness Poems 1817
15
Endymion Pretty Paganism and Purgatory Blind
35
Hyperion Colossal Grandeur
56
Four medieval love stories
68
The spring odes 1819
98
Final poems
119
Conclusion
141
The poems to Fanny Brawne
149
Notes
153
Select reading
167
Index of persons and Keatss poems
169
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