Love in a Green Shade: Idyllic Romances Ancient to ModernU of Nebraska Press, 2000 M01 1 - 279 pages Love in a Green Shade examines for the first time in depth the reception history of Daphnis and Chloe in literature, beginning with its Renaissance rediscovery and working through its various transformations in English, French, Spanish, and other literatures. At the same time, Richard F. Hardin launches a groundbreaking exploration of the idyllic romance tradition in fiction and drama. While Virgil and Theocritus beget a tradition of poetry concerned with male eroticism, idyllic romance centers on the couple in a story pointing toward marriage. In addition to Daphnis and Chloe, this study considers numerous works influenced by the idyllic romance tradition, including Shakespeare?s The Tempest, Milton?s Paradise Lost, Bernardin?s Paul et Virginie, Stowe?s The Pearl of Orr?s Island, Cather?s O Pioneers!, novels by Sand, Hardy, and Pardo Bazan, Louis Hemon?s Maria Chapdelaine, and Mishima?s The Sound of Waves. |
Contents
Renaissance Rediscoveries 25 2 223 | 25 |
Wit and Innocence | 52 |
Paul Virginie and George | 79 |
Ladies of Maine | 107 |
Spanish Idylls | 135 |
British Naturists | 161 |
Innocence | 174 |
Points of Departure | 215 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abel Amyot's beauty Bernardin Blue Lagoon cave century chapter characters childhood classical comic couple couple's Cymbeline Daphnis and Chloe Daphnis's death Dick Dorcon earlier echoes ecphrasis edition episode Fadette father feeling feminine fiction foundling François French Gabriel garden George Sand Gessner Greek romance Green Mansions Greenwood Tree Hardy Hardy's heroine Hudson human ideal idyllic romance idyllicism innocence irony island Jewett later literary live Longus Longus's love story lovers Luis male Manuela Mara María Maria Chapdelaine marriage marry Milton's mother narrative narrator nature never novel novelists nymphs Orr's Island Paradise Lost Pardo Bazán passion pastoral pastourelle Paul et Virginie Pearl Pepita Pérez Perucho play poem poet readers recalls Renaissance Rima rural rustic Sand's says scene Schiller seems sentimental sexual Shakespeare sheep shepherd shepherdess Stacpoole storm Stowe Stowe's Tempest theme Theocritus tion translation Valera village Winter's Tale woman women Wright writes young