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The Pub in Literature Steven Earnshaw

The Pub in Literature par Steven Earnshaw

The Pub in Literature Steven Earnshaw


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Résumé

Tracing the roles of the drinking house in literature from Chaucer's Tabard to Martin Amis' Black Cross, this study takes in Falstaff's Boars Head and the numerous inns and public houses of Dickens, along with lesser known works where the drinking place is central.

The Pub in Literature Résumé

The Pub in Literature Steven Earnshaw

Why did Tony Blair take Britain to war with Iraq? Because, this book argues, he was following the core political beliefs and style-the Blair identity-manifest and consistent throughout his decade in power. Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan, and finally Iraq were wars to which Blair was drawn due to his black-and-white framing of the world, his overwhelming confidence that he could shape events, and his tightly-held, presidential style of government. This new application of political psychology to the British prime ministership analyses every answer Blair gave to a foreign policy question in the House of Commons during his decade in power in order to develop a portrait of the prime minister as decision maker. Drawing upon original interviews with major political, diplomatic and military figures at the top of British politics, the book reconstructs Blair's wars, tracing his personal influence on British foreign policy and international politics during his tumultuous tenure.

Sommaire

Introduction - the connection between the English nation, its hostelries and its literature. 2. Early doors :The Tabard in Canterbury Tales; Betty's Alehouse in Piers the Plowman; The Ballad of John Barleycorn; Skelton's The Tunning of Elynour Rummyng. 3. The Falstaffian state: Falstaff and Hal in the Boar's Head. 4. Wonderfull Yeares: Ben Jonson's The New Inn; Taming of the (and a) Shrew; Dekker. 5. Pepys pissed: drinking songs (1640s-1700); The Diary of Samuel Pepys - the various uses Pepys found for inns, taverns and alehouses - not all of them to do with drinking. 6. Jovial, Brutal, Vulgar, Graphic Ned Ward: The London Spy and sundry pieces. 7. Scene, an inn? and horrible gin: Farquhar's The Beaux Stratagem; Gay's The Beggar's Opera; Fielding's Tom Jones, Joseph Andrews and Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon; Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer. 8. Where did the Romantics drink?: more Goldsmith; Cowper's The Task; Crabbe's The Borough; Wordsworth's Benjamin the Waggoner; The Immortal Dinner Party; Lamb's Letters (Salutation and Cat). 9. Dickens: The Maypole in Barnaby Rudge and a riot of other hostelries. 10. Of rainbows and fingers: Silas Marner, Felix Holt, The Mayor of Casterbridge. 11. Our mutual wasteland: Arthur Morrison's The Red-Cow Group (a short story in Mean Streets); T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land; Patrick Hamilton's Hangover Square; A.E. Coppard's The Black Dog; John Hampson's Saturday Night at the Greyhound. 12. Kegged: George Orwell's Moon under Water; Alan Sillitoe's Saturday Night and Sunday Morning; J.M. O'Neil's Duffy is Dead; Michael Curtin's The League Against Christmas; Martin Amis's London Fields.

Informations supplémentaires

GOR011687146
9780719053054
0719053056
The Pub in Literature Steven Earnshaw
Occasion - Très bon état
Broché
Manchester University Press
20001130
304
N/A
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