More Shopping OptionsBlake's Night Thoughts discusses Blake as a poet and artist of night, considering night through graveyard poetry and Young in the eighteenth century, urbanism in the nineteenth and Levinas and Blanchot's writings in the twentieth. Taking "night" as the breakdown of rational progressive thought and of thought based on concepts of identity, the book reads the lyric poetry, some Prophetic works, including a chapter on The Four Zoas, the illustrations to Young, and Dante, and looks at Blake's writing of madness.
Jeremy Tambling is Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Hong Kong.Jeremy Tambling is Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Hong Kong.
Preface * Introduction: 'The Sun is Gone Down' * 'In the Silent of the Night' * Young, and 'Weary Night' * Night Dreams: The Four Zoas * 'I see London, Blind...' * 'Forests of the Night': Blake and Madness * Dante's 'Deep and Woody Way' * Notes * Index