Shelley's longest poem has been, until recently, the most neglected of his works due to its apparent obscurity and its intermixture of epic, allegory and romance. In the last decades however it has attracted more interest and has been shown to encompass a diverge range of subjects including, science, politics, genre and orientalism. New critical attention has repositioned this work within the Shelleyan canon and within Romantic Studies in general.
The Revolt of Islam: Texts, Subtexts, Contexts
Maria Valentini
2018-01-01
Abstract
Shelley's longest poem has been, until recently, the most neglected of his works due to its apparent obscurity and its intermixture of epic, allegory and romance. In the last decades however it has attracted more interest and has been shown to encompass a diverge range of subjects including, science, politics, genre and orientalism. New critical attention has repositioned this work within the Shelleyan canon and within Romantic Studies in general.File in questo prodotto:
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