1st Edition

Byron's Don Juan

By Bernard Beatty Copyright 1985
    258 Pages
    by Routledge

    258 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1985. What sort of poem is Don Juan, and how does it maintain its momentum through its long and often struggling narrative? These are the questions that Bernard Beatty proposes in this subtle and elegant discussion of Byron’s masterwork. The legend of Don Juan was entrenched in European literature and other arts long before it came under Byron’s hands, yet Byron’s treatment of the story is often almost unrecognisably far from its forebears. Beatty indicates how deeply Byron has assimilated his predecessors in order to produce his own work.

    The sustained argument of this book raises questions of interest not only to students of Byron but of comedy in general, as well as of the place of religious motifs in apparently secularised modes.

    Preface;  1. Commandant and Commendatore  2. The Narrator’s Cantos  3. The Amorous Sphere  4. Aurora Raby;  Conclusion;  Index

    Biography

    Authored by Beatty, Bernard