Type of bind: Audio Cassette
EAN num: 9780001047600
Format: Audiobook
ISBN number: 0001047604
Label: HarperCollins Audio
Manufacturer: HarperCollins Audio
Printing Date: April 25, 1994
Publishing house: HarperCollins Audio
Sale Popularity Level: 6028677
Studio: HarperCollins Audio
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
Aurora Leigh, now available in the very first critically edited and fully annotated edition for almost a century, is the foremost example of the mid-nineteenth century poem of contemporary life. It is an amazing verse novel which provides a panoramic view of the early Victorian age in London. The dominant presence in the work however, is the narrator Aurora Leigh, as she develops her ideas on art, love, God, the 'Woman Question', and society.
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Rated by buyers
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Having been brought up on the notion that Elizabeth Barrett Browning was the slighter and less-talented adjunct poet of her husband Robert, I was pleased to find I was wrong.
She's terrific.
This is a brilliant work, full of dazzling poetry and insights.
It's loaded with allusions and references (I read the Penguin edition; and the notes there run for many, many pages--and these barely skim the surface), but it is remarkably accessible and fun.
This is a work full of wisdom and unusual perspectives. Luminous and grand and down-to-earth all at once. Imagine Jane Eyre written by Shakespeare.
It's an education in Victorian (upper-middle-class) England, and also the Victorian English infatuation with Italy. It's also a biting and incisive feminist portrait, full of rebellion and self-discovery.
I strongly recommend it to anyone who likes poetry, or Victorian novels.
Rated by buyers
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E.B.B. set out to outstrip Milton and does so in an amazingly original way. Aurora Leigh is a novel in blank verse that is actually longer than Paradise Lost! She combines the genre expectations for a woman writer--the novel--with an audacious bid for poetic immortality. The book tells a good story but it also works as a formidable reminder to her contemporary poets that the novel is taking over and poets must make sure that they are writing in the spirit of the age.
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