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Byron was - to echo Wordsworth - half-perceived and half-created. He would have affirmed Jean Baudrillard's observation that "to seduce is to die to reality and reconstitute oneself as illusion." But among the readers he seduced, in person and in poetry, were women possessed of vivid imaginations who collaborated with him in fashioning his legend. Accused of "treating women harshly," Byron acknowledged: "It may be so - but I have been their martyr.
My whole life has been sacrificed to them and by them." Those whom he spellbound often returned the favor and in their own writings tried to remake his public image to reflect their own.
Through writings both well known and generally unknown, Soderholm examines the poet's relationship with five women: Elizabeth Pigot, Caroline Lamb, Annabella Milbanke, Teresa Guiccioli, and Marguerite Blessington. These women participated in Byron's life and literary career and the manipulation of images that is the Byron legend.
Soderholm argues against the sentimental depictions of biographers who would preserve Byron's romantic aura by diminishing the contributions of these women to his social, sexual, and literary identity. By restoring the contexts in which literary works charm or bedevil particular readers, the author shows the consequences of Byron's poetic seductions during and after his life.
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Subjects
19th century, Authors and readers, Authorship, Biography, English Poets, Fame, History, History and criticism, Literary forgeries and mystifications, Poets, English, Relations with women, Self in literature, Women and literature, Byron, george gordon byron, baron, 1788-1824Places
Great Britain, HistoryTimes
19th centuryEdition | Availability |
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Fantasy, forgery, and the Byron legend
1996, University Press of Kentucky
in English
0813119391 9780813119397
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. [190]-192) and index.
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The Physical Object
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