The "Earthly Paradise" by William Morris (Garland Reference Library of the Humanities)
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Product Description
This annotated critical edition is the first attempt to make Morris's 42,000 word verse sequence accessible to a modern audience. The edition's scholarly apparatus also records the location of extant manuscripts and provides full scholarly collations of changes made in Morris's text during his lifetime. A full introduction to the edition also clarifies the work's publication history and literary and biographical content, its historical antecedents in traditional 'earthly paradise' narratives, and Morris's decision to cast it as a seasonal cycle of monthly 'classical' and 'medieval' tales. Morris's opening prologue records the struggles of 12 Scandanavian seafarers who have fled the Bubonic plague to a landfall in 14th-century Greece, and he arranged the 24 monthly tales to explore the collective memories of these wanderers and their choral audience of Greek elders. The edition's critical headnotes comment on Morris's historicism, reflected in the extended manuscripts many revisions of his classical, medieval, Germanic, Scandanavian, Arabic and Persian sources. A wealth of references relating the work to art, history and politics. Morris's practical knowledge, passion for travel, and radical-democratic convictions also prompted him to explore areas of life not commonly associated with Victorian poetry. The edition's footnotes therefore gloss allusions to bird and animal lore, the practices of ancient and medieval agriculture and the details of Viking ships and medieval seafaring. Morris also wove many new imaginative details into his redactions of these legends, and the headnotes assess whether he followed his sources, drew on roughly analogous characters encountered elsewhere, or completely reinvented familiar characters. They also comment on several of Morris's deeper authorial decisions to portray women more favourably, for example; or focus on particular aspects of the Bubonic Plague; or insert pointed glosses of 'heroic' events by wary peasant bystanders and examine them in the light of Morris's other published views on art, history, politics and human relations. Ample illustrations and original initials, finally, provide a sense of The Earthly Paradise's original appearance and design.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2168566 in Books
- Published on: 2001-12-26
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 2
- Binding: Hardcover
- 1639 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"It is time that a work of such richness and beauty, whatever its flaws, was again made available, and, for that, Routledge and Professor Boos are to be praised without reservation. Boos's introduction is helpful and perceptive."
-Clive Wilmer, "The Times Literary Supplement, June 6, 2003
"Professor Boos is the most prominent of a number of scholars, most of them American and relatively young, who have argued against the poem's neglect, attributing it to our intellectual laziness: a passive acceptance of the modernist reaction against Victorian monuments."
-Clive Wilmer, "The Times Literary Supplement, June 6, 2003
From the Back Cover
William Morris was a pioneering socialist, book designer, decorative artist, and author of intense short lyrics, long poetic narratives and utopian, socialist prose romances. This annotated critical edition is the first attempt to make Morris's 42,000-word verse sequence accessible to a modern audience.