Synopses & Reviews
Living Poetry demonstrates that poems are vital expressions of how we live, feel and think. Lucidly written and jargon free, it introduces a range of poems from the Elizabethan age to the present day, presenting practical models of close reading and a stimulating rationale for the power of poetry to move and excite us.
About the Author
WILLIAM HUTCHINGS was formerly Senior Lecturer in English Literature and Director of the Centre for Excellence in Enquiry-Based Learning at the University of Manchester, UK. He now lectures regularly to public groups locally and nationally, while continuing to teach Eighteenth-century Literature at the University of Manchester. He has a wealth of teaching experience on English Literature courses at undergraduate and postgraduate level, and is the editor of Andrew Marvell: Selected Poems (Carcanet: 1988), the author ofThe Poetry of William Cowper (Croom Helm: 1983) and Literary Criticism: A Practical Guide for Students (Edward Arnold: 1989).
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
PART I: ELEMENTS OF POETRY
Form and Technique
PARTII: LIVING POETRY
Feeling: The Experience of Emotion in Poems from the Sixteenth to Twentieth Centuries
Thinking: Varieties of Thought from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Centuries
Doing: Poetry of Action from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Centuries
Living and Dying: From the Sixteenth to the Twentieth Centuries
PART III: POETRY LIVES
Writing and Reading Poems in the Present
Index