R. Rees (éd.), Ted Hughes and the Classics

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Hughes classicsRoger Rees (éd.), Ted Hughes and the Classics, Oxford, 2009.

Éditeur : Oxford University Press
Collection : Classical Presences
368 pages
ISBN : 978-0-19-922971-0
£65.00

This collection of sixteen articles, written by leading specialists in Classical and English literature, is an important contribution to the critical assessment of Ted Hughes, one of the most popular and controversial English poets of the late 20th century. The chapters are arranged broadly chronologically according to Hughes's publications, and deal with different aspects of his engagement with the culture and literature of ancient Greece and Rome, including translations, original works, classical thought, and ideologies in his drama and verse. Hughes is revealed as a leading figure in literary reception of the Classics in 20th century poetry, a sharply intelligent and sensitive reader of some of the world's foundational texts.

Table of contents :

- Keith Sagar: Ted Hughes and the Classics
- Stuart Gillespie: Hughes's first translation
- Lorna Hardwick: Can (modern) poets do classical drama? The case of Ted Hughes
- John Talbot: Eliot's Seneca, Ted Hughes's Oedipus
- Janne Stigen Drangsholt: Living myths
- Vanda Zajko: Mutilated towards alignment?': Prometheus on his Crag and the 'Cambridge School' of anthropology
- Neil Roberts: Hughes's myth: the Classics in Gaudete and Cave Birds
- Roger Rees: Between monarchy and democracy: neo-classicism and the Laureate poetry of Ted Hughes
- Garrett A. Jacobsen: 'A holiday in a rest home': Ted Hughes as vates in Tales from Ovid
- Anne-Marie Tatham: Passion in extremis in Ted Hughes's Tales from Ovid
- Jennifer Ingleheart: The transformation of the - Actaeon myth: Ovid, Metamorphoses 3 and Ted Hughes's Tales from Ovid

Source : OUP

 

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