Description
About the Author
James Rovira is chair and associate professor in the English department at Mississippi College.
Reviews
It might seem odd to bring the Romanticism of the 19th century together with the rock music of the 20th and 21st centuries. However, with this book Rovira (Mississippi College) shows that there is a valid connection. In dealing with rock, the contributors (most of whom are, like the editor, English scholars) focus primarily on lyrics rather than the music itself. The contributors do not superimpose their concepts of Romanticism onto song lyrics; rather, they show that song lyricists from Bob Dylan and the Beatles to U2 have had demonstrable connections to Romantic poets such as Blake and Wordsworth and to the thinking of the Romantic era. In exploring such connections, the essayists delve into the sociocultural background of the earlier time and the present. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. * CHOICE *
This collection by James Rovira shows just how influential the Romantics have been on modern popular music, not only furnishing contemporary singers with the themes and lyrics of their songs but, in many cases, also providing the attitude that defines post-war rock music. I was delighted to see some of my favorite Blake-inspired adaptations included here, as well as the fact that the contributors do not simply deal with the obvious examples of the influence of Romanticism but display a much wider range of appreciation and erudition. -- Jason Whittaker, University of Lincoln
A deft examination of the varieties of Romanticism and their incarnations in rock music, as wide-ranging and stimulating as the music and the literature it probes. -- Robert Pattison, Long Island University, author of The Triumph of Vulgarity
Book Information
ISBN 9781498553834
Author James Rovira
Format Hardback
Page Count 198
Imprint Lexington Books
Publisher Lexington Books
Weight(grams) 472g
Dimensions(mm) 237mm * 159mm * 21mm