
Translations of Chaucer and Virgil
William Wordsworth(Author)
Bruce E. Graver(Editor)
Cornell University Press
Will be published approx. on 15. July 1998
Book
Hardback
616 pages
978-0-8014-3452-5 (ISBN)
Description
William Wordsworth's two most extensive translation projects were his modernization of selected poems by Chaucer and his unfinished translation of Virgil's "Aeneid". Bruce E. Graver offers the texts, a complete account of their genesis and publication, a discussion of Wordsworth's practice as a translator. Graver's reading of the "Aeneid" corrects hundreds of substantive errors in the published texts of the translation. Unlike other volumes in the Cornell Wordsworth series, this one focuses on a particular kind of poetical work, translation. Like others, it includes reading texts with full critical apparatuses, photographic reproductions and transcriptions of manuscripts, as well as Graver's own introduction and notes which amount to a critical monograph on Wordsworth and translation. Graver suggests that both translation projects were self-conscious attempts on Wordsworth's part to compete with John Dryden, the pre-eminent English translator. He supplies evidence for a major reassessment of Wordsworth's attitudes toward Dryden and, indirectly, of the relationship of Wordsworth's poetry to British neoclassicism.
Graver believes Wordsworth's scholarly abilities were much greater than commonly supposed, and that his translations will interest classicists, mediaevalists and 18th-century scholars, as well as romanticists.
Graver believes Wordsworth's scholarly abilities were much greater than commonly supposed, and that his translations will interest classicists, mediaevalists and 18th-century scholars, as well as romanticists.
Reviews / Votes
Bruce E. Graver's edition of Translations of Chaucer and Virgil by William Wordsworth will be of considerable interest to Chaucerians. Graver gives a full account of the textual history of Wordsworth's modernizations... The reader is able to trace both composition and the revisions, and to perceive the extent of Wordsworth's respect for the medieval poet's idiom and diction....The scholarship.will generally advance the study of Chaucer's reception in the post-medieval era.- Valerie Allen and Margaret Connolly (The Year's Work in English Studies)
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Ithaca
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paper over boards
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 155 mm
Weight
1361 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8014-3452-5 (9780801434525)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Sally Bushell is Lecturer in English Literature, Director of Graduate Studies, and Co-Director of The Wordsworth Centre at Lancaster University. She is the author of Re-Reading The Excursion. James A. Butler is Professor of English at La Salle University. He is the editor of The Ruined Cottage and The Pedlar and Lyrical Ballads and Other Poems, 1797-1800, also in the Cornell Wordsworth. Michael Jaye has retired as Professor of English at Rutgers University. David Garcia is Associate Provost of Ithaca College.