audio record
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Description
In this programme Brian Stone sets out to help students with a difficult kind of poetry - the satirical poetry written in England between Hall and Jonson.
Metadata describing this Open University audio programme
Module code and title: A201, Renaissance and Reformation
Item code: A201; 31
Recording date: 1972-01-31
First transmission date: 05-09-1972
Published: 1972
Rights Statement: Rights owned or controlled by The Open University
Restrictions on use: This material can be used in accordance with The Open University conditions of use. A link to the conditions can be found at the bottom of all OUDA web pages.
Duration: 00:17:59
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Producer: Nuala O'Faolain
Contributors: Dennis McCarthy; Brian Stone; Gary Watson
Publisher: BBC Open University
Keyword(s): King Lear; Satirical Poetry
Footage description: In this programme Brian Stone sets out to help students with a difficult kind of poetry - the satirical poetry written in England between Hall and Jonson. An understanding of it is helped in two ways: professional readers make more sense of this complex poetry, to the ear, than is immediately accessible to a student from a printed page; secondly, of course, Brian Stone sets the satirical impulse in its aesthetic and social context. He identifies themes and devices common to the satirists of this time, and he also indicates the heights to which satire could reach by including one of the greatest speeches of King Lear. He ends with the Jonson sonnet 'On Poet-ape' which warns the modern student, as it warned the original readers, of the need for an alert and critical response to contemporary literature.
Master spool number: TLN05FM222J
Production number: TLN05FM222J
Available to public: no