Current Search: Cervone, Skye T. (x)
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Title
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Magic words: illuminating the role of language in Lord Dunsany's fictional prose.
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Creator
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Cervone, Skye T., Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, Department of English
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Abstract/Description
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It is a great deficit to Fantasy scholarship that Lord Dunsany has remained largely ignored. Despite the lack of critical attention Lord Dunsany's work has received at the hands of critics, his fiction has been immensely important to other Fantasy authors. Dunsany's prose is highly stylized and is an intricate aspect of his world building. While many critics agree that Dunsany's prose style is unique and masterful, no detailed analysis of it exists. This study focuses primarily on Dunsany's...
Show moreIt is a great deficit to Fantasy scholarship that Lord Dunsany has remained largely ignored. Despite the lack of critical attention Lord Dunsany's work has received at the hands of critics, his fiction has been immensely important to other Fantasy authors. Dunsany's prose is highly stylized and is an intricate aspect of his world building. While many critics agree that Dunsany's prose style is unique and masterful, no detailed analysis of it exists. This study focuses primarily on Dunsany's prose style in The King of Elfland's Daughter, widely agreed to be Dunsany's finest novel, and certainly characteristic of his early fiction writing. I then discuss Dunsany's profound influence on J.R.R. Tolkien's critical and fictional work. Both authors embrace Dryden's "fairy way of writing" within their respective works, embracing the old and romantic, as well as nature's creations, as precious treasures in our realm and in the imaginative realm of Faery.
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Date Issued
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2011
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/FAU/3174505
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Subject Headings
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Aesthetics in literature, Fantasy fiction, English, Criticism and interpretation, Realism in literature
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Format
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Document (PDF)