TY - BOOK ID - 85471176 TI - Coleridge's imagination : essays in memory of Pete Laver AU - Laver, Pete AU - Gravil, Richard AU - Newlyn, Lucy AU - Roe, Nicholas PY - 1985 SN - 0511659326 0521303028 0521033993 PB - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, DB - UniCat KW - English poetry KW - History and criticism. KW - Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, KW - Coleridge, S. T. KW - Kolʹridzh, Samuil, KW - Кольридж, Самуил, KW - Kolʹridzh, Samuil Teĭlor, KW - Кольридж, Самуил Тейлор, KW - Kūlīridzh, Ṣāmwīl Tīlūr, KW - קולרידג׳, סמיואל טיילור KW - Kūlīridj, Ṣāmwīl Tīlūr, KW - كولردج، صمويل تيلور, KW - קאָלרידש, ס. ט., KW - Criticism and interpretation. KW - Imagination. KW - Laver, Pete, KW - Imagery, Mental KW - Images, Mental KW - Mental imagery KW - Mental images KW - Educational psychology KW - Intellect KW - Psychology KW - Reproduction (Psychology) KW - Arts and Humanities KW - Literature UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:85471176 AB - The unifying thrust of the book is an exploration of the tension in Coleridge's theory and practice between the Imagination and the Natural, and a delineation of the particular profile of Coleridge's imagination as compared to that of Wordsworth. There are challenging reassessments of Dejection: an Ode, Christabel and Kubla Khan, among other poems; a cluster of essays on the relations between Coleridge and Wordsworth; a strikingly original examination of Coleridge's imagination at work in the privacy of his notebooks; and an intriguing study of the neglected imagination of Mrs Coleridge. The volume opens and closes with major statements by Jonathan Wordsworth on Coleridge's primary imagination and by John Beer on Kubla Khan, and includes work by such eminent scholars as Thomas MacFarland, David Erdman, Norman Fruman, Robert Barth, Anthony Harding, and Stephen Parrish. ER -