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Robertson Davies’s Cornish Trilogy

A Reader’s Guide

by Victor J. Lams (Author)
©2008 Monographs 220 Pages

Summary

Robertson Davies’s Cornish Trilogy: A Reader’s Guide is the first book-length study of Davies’s best work: The Rebel Angels, What’s Bred in the Bone, and The Lyre of Orpheus. In The Rebel Angels, Maria and Darcourt alternate in narrating the novel’s theme (obsession) before escaping from its grip by their mutual assistance, while other characters are less fortunate. What’s Bred in the Bone narrates the artistic development of Canadian painter Francis Cornish, which is crowned by his stunning Marriage at Cana, an iconographic presentation of his personal myth; a color reproduction of Bronzino’s Allegory exemplifies their stylistic kinship. While The Lyre of Orpheus is ostensibly focused on the completion and staging of an unfinished Hoffmann opera, it narrates the ameliorative personal development of the characters who interact during that project.

Details

Pages
220
Year
2008
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433102288
Language
English
Keywords
Davies, Robertson Cornish trilogy Novel Art
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2008. VIII, 220 pp.

Biographical notes

Victor J. Lams (Author)

The Author: Emeritus Professor of English at California State University Chico, Victor J. Lams received his Ph.D. in English from Northwestern University. He has written five earlier books, all published by Peter Lang: two on Richardson’s novel Clarissa (1999, 2001) and three others on John Henry Newman, two of them on his Parochial Sermons (2004, 2006), and most recently The Rhetoric of Newman’s Apologia Pro Catholica, 1845-1864 (2007).

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Title: Robertson Davies’s Cornish Trilogy