John Keats' Medical Notebook
Title | John Keats' Medical Notebook PDF eBook |
Author | Hrileena Ghosh |
Publisher | English Association Monographs |
Pages | 320 |
Release | 2020 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1789620619 |
This study explores the poet John Keats' manuscript medical Notebook from his time at Guy's Hospital (October 1815 - March 1816), reconstructing and recovering the intriguing and mutually enriching connections between Keats' two careers of medicine and poetry.
John Keats and the Medical Imagination
Title | John Keats and the Medical Imagination PDF eBook |
Author | Nicholas Roe |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 274 |
Release | 2017-12-06 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3319638114 |
This book presents ten new chapters on John Keats's medical imagination, beginning with his practical engagement with dissection and surgery, and the extraordinary poems he wrote during his 'busy time' at Guy's Hospital 1815-17. The Physical Society at Guy's and the demands of a medical career are explored, as are the lyrical spheres of botany, melancholia, and Keats's strange oxymoronic poetics of suspended animation. Here too are links between surveillance of patients at Bedlam and of inner city streets that were walked by the poet of 'To Autumn'. The book concludes with a survey of multiple romantic pathologies of that most Keatsian of diseases, pulmonary tuberculosis.
John Keats and Romantic Scotland
Title | John Keats and Romantic Scotland PDF eBook |
Author | Katie Garner |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 252 |
Release | 2022-03-24 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0191899380 |
Between 22 June and 18 August 1818, John Keats and his friend and collaborator Charles Armitage Brown embarked on an epic walking tour of the English Lake District, South West Scotland, Northern Ireland, the Ayrshire Burns Country, the Scottish Highlands and Western Isles, and the Great Glen north eastwards to Inverness, Beauly, the Black Isle, and Cromarty. During the tour, Keats and Brown both wrote extensive and detailed accounts of their experiences. The twelve new essays in this collection each explore the significance of the 1818 tour for understanding Keats's achievements, ranging across topics such as the contemporary Highland tour; Scottish literature, history, landscape and culture; Romantic responses to Robert Burns's life, works and places; and Keats's health and influence on Scottish artists.
Keats's Places
Title | Keats's Places PDF eBook |
Author | Richard Marggraf Turley |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 313 |
Release | 2018-09-03 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3319922432 |
As the essays in this volume reveal, Keats’s places could be comforting, familiar, grounding sites, but they were also shifting, uncanny, paradoxical spaces where the geographical comes into tension with the familial, the touristic with the medical, the metropolitan with the archipelagic. Collectively, the chapters in Keats’s Places range from the claustrophobic stands of Guy’s Hospital operating theatre to the boneshaking interior of the Southampton mail coach; from Highland crags to Hampstead Heath; from crowded city interiors to leafy suburban lanes. Offering new insights into the complex registrations of place and the poetic imagination, the contributors to this book explore how the significant places in John Keats’s life helped to shape an authorial identity.
Keats's Anatomy of Melancholy
Title | Keats's Anatomy of Melancholy PDF eBook |
Author | White Robert White |
Publisher | Edinburgh University Press |
Pages | 248 |
Release | 2020-09-09 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1474480470 |
A detailed study of John Keats's classic volume of poetry published in 1820 considered in the light of the history of melancholyFirst, book-length critical study of John Keats's collection of poems, Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes, And Other Poems (1820)Considers the anthology as a poetically and thematically unified collection, instead of the more usual method of analyzing the poems in chronological order of writingProposes that the main theme running through the volume is melancholy, a very capacious medical category extending back to ancient Greco-Roman writers, through the Renaissance, and the subject of literary cults in the Romantic ageThe first detailed study of Keats's markings and annotations on his copy of Robert Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy (1621) which was his favourite book during 1819 when he was writing the poemsThis book examines John Keats's immensely important collection of poems, Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St Agnes, And Other Poems (1820), and is published in the volume's bicentenary. It analyses the collection as an authorially organised and multi-dimensionally unified volume rather than as a collection of occasional poems. R. S. White argues that a guiding theme behind the 1820 volume is the persistent emphasis on different types of melancholy, an ancient, all-consuming medical condition and literary preoccupation in Renaissance and Romantic poetry. Melancholy was a lifelong interest of Keats's, touching on his medical training, his temperament and his delighted reading in 1819 of Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy.
Letters
Title | Letters PDF eBook |
Author | John Keats |
Publisher | |
Pages | 256 |
Release | 1901 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Life, Death, and Consciousness in the Long Nineteenth Century
Title | Life, Death, and Consciousness in the Long Nineteenth Century PDF eBook |
Author | Lucy Cogan |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 283 |
Release | 2022-11-07 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3031133633 |
This book explores how the writers, poets, thinkers, historians, scientists, dilettantes and frauds of the long-nineteenth century addressed the “limit cases” regarding human existence that medicine continuously uncovered as it stretched the boundaries of knowledge. These cases cast troubling and distorted shadows on the culture, throwing into relief the values, vested interests, and power relations regarding the construction of embodied life and consciousness that underpinned the understanding of what it was to be alive in the long nineteenth century. Ranging over a period from the mid-eighteenth century through to the first decade of the twentieth century—an era that has been called the ‘Age of Science’—the essays collected here consider the cultural ripple effects of those previously unimaginable revolutions in science and medicine on humanity’s understanding of being.