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Terrible Beauty by Patrick J. Keane
Terrible Beauty by Patrick J. Keane







Terrible Beauty by Patrick J. Keane

The Pope, Charlie Hebdo, and Islamist Terrorism I Cried to Dream Again: Song - Maura Kennedy | Introduced by Patrick J.

Terrible Beauty by Patrick J. Keane

Inquiring Spirit: My Friend, Jim Cerasoli (1938-2015)Ī Good Time Was Had by Some: On Assigning & Relishing the Eternal Punishment of Others Proto-Feminist, Trouble-Making Rebel: Hawthorne, a “Remarkable Case” & the Genesis of Hester PrynneĪ Great Labyrinth: The Winding Stair, Maud Gonne, and a Quest for the Quintessential Yeats Of Beginnings and Endings: Huck Finn and Tom EliotĮmerson and Self-Reliance: Paradoxical Idea, Ambiguous Legacyīlake, Nietzsche, Wilde, and Yeats: Contraries, Anti-Selves, and the Truth of Masks His books include William Butler Yeats: Contemporary Studies in Literature (1973), A Wild Civility: Interactions in the Poetry and Thought of Robert Graves (1980), Yeats’s Interactions with Tradition (1987), Terrible Beauty: Yeats, Joyce, Ireland and the Myth of the Devouring Female (1988), Coleridge’s Submerged Politics (1994), Emerson, Romanticism, and Intuitive Reason: The Transatlantic “Light of All Our Day” (2003), and Emily Dickinson’s Approving God: Divine Design and the Problem of Suffering (2007). Though he has written on a wide range of topics, his areas of special interest have been 19th and 20th-century poetry in the Romantic tradition Irish literature and history the interactions of literature with philosophic, religious, and political thinking the impact of Nietzsche on certain 20th century writers and, most recently, Transatlantic studies, exploring the influence of German Idealist philosophy and British Romanticism on American writers. Keane is Professor Emeritus of Le Moyne College and a Contributing Editor at Numéro Cinq.









Terrible Beauty by Patrick J. Keane