Alfred Tennyson
Title Details

247 Pages

22.8 x 15.2 cm

Series: Literary Criticism in Perspective

Series Vol. Number: 58

Imprint: Camden House

Alfred Tennyson

The Critical Legacy

by Laurence W. Mazzeno

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Explores the critics' reaction to the pre-eminent Victorian poet from his lifetime to the present.

Alfred Tennyson: The Critical Legacy explores the critics' reaction to the work of the nineteenth-century English poet most closely associated with the Victorian era. Perhaps more than any other Victorian poet, Tennyson's reputation has waxed and waned in the century since his death. He has been alternatively sanctified and vilified for his choice of subject matter, social outlook, morality, or techniques of versification. His reputation has weathered even the most vitriolic attempts to discredit both the man and his writings; and as criticism of the late twentieth century demonstrates, Tennyson's claim to pre-eminence among the Victorians is now unchallenged. Laurence Mazzeno begins this narrative analysis of Tennyson criticism with an look at how Tennyson was regarded by his contemporaries, before launching a detailed examination of twentieth-century criticism. A chapter is devoted to the period immediately following Tennyson's death, when a generation of post-Victorians reacted violently against what they considered his sappy sentimentalism, cloying moralism, and insensitive jingoism. Subsequent chapters describe how critics resurrected Tennyson, highlighting both his technical mastery and his social criticism. Special attention is given to major biographers and critics such as Harold Nicolson, the poet's grandson Sir Charles Tennyson, Jerome Buckley, R. B. Martin, Michael Thorn, and Peter Levi. A final chapter focuses on the ways Tennyson and his work have been addressed by poststructuralist critics. Throughout the study, Mazzeno demonstrates that the critics' reaction toTennyson reveals as much about themselves and the critical prejudices of their own times as it does about the Victorian Laureate and his poetry.

Laurence W. Mazzeno is president emeritus of Alvernia College, Reading, Pennsylvania.
Introduction
Tennyson Among His Contemporaries: 1827-1892
A Mixed Legacy: 1892-1916
Criticism Pro and Con: 1916-1959
The Tennyson Revival: 1960-1969
The Height of Critical Acclaim: 1970-1980
Tennyson Among the Poststructuralists: 1981-1989
Tennyson Fin-de-Siècle: 1990-2000
A Twenty-First Century Prospectus
Works by Alfred Tennyson
Works Cited
Index

LAURENCE W. MAZZENO is President Emeritus of Alvernia University.

"Marxists, feminists, .... new historicists, post-colonial critics ... all take their place alongside the enduring neo-humanists, as Mazzeno calls them, to expose Tennyson to the full blast of the modern critical industry. Tennyson seems to be surviving quite well.... 'Tennyson has - finally - settled comfortably into his 'place' among the great poets of the English language (190)." TENNYSON RESEARCH BULLETIN
"In this thorough and insightful reception study, Laurence Mazzeno shows that critical esteem of Alfred Tennyson's oeuvre shifted perhaps more radically than that of any other Victorian poet during the twentieth century.... [A] well-written and worthy effort to help us understand his... critical history." VICTORIAN STUDIES

Hardcover

9781571132628

October 2004

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Ebook (EPDF)

9781571136466

October 2004

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Title Details

247 Pages

2.28 x 1.52 cm

Series: Literary Criticism in Perspective

Series Vol. Number: 58

Imprint: Camden House