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Phyllis Grosskurth (1924–2015)

Autor de Byron: The Flawed Angel

11 Obras 440 Miembros 4 Reseñas

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Incluye los nombres: Ph Grosskurth, Phyllis Grosskurth

Obras de Phyllis Grosskurth

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An excellent resource for understanding male homosexuality, this also is full of vivid revelations of Victorian life in general and in particular among the middle and upper classes. Symonds (1840-93) was a prominent man of letters in 19th century England. His memoirs are intimate, but not erotic or titillating, and he is an earnest ethicist.
 
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davidveal | Dec 27, 2015 |
It wasn't easy to be a pioneering sexual investigator born in the hey-day of Victorian Britain, particularly not if you were married to a lesbian, and if your own sexual interests focused on "urolagnia" (look it up). But Havelock Ellis was nothing if not resourceful, and he managed to have a full, productive, and generally satisfying life.

Grosskurth isn't a particularly good writer; this biography isn't graceful, and probably contains too much information for most readers. But it gets the job done, and leaves you appreciative of the courage and obstinacy of Ellis, who didn't mind going against the mainstream of British society and culture of his time.… (más)
½
 
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yooperprof | Dec 11, 2011 |
The speculation that Byron may have been bipolar compellingly presented by Kay Jamison in a chapter of "Touched with Fire," is elongated into a doorstop-sized biography as though it were diagnosed fact in this diletantish venture into Byron scholarship by psychologist Grosskurth. The word "opportunism" comes to mind. The occasional intriguing insight hardly seems worth the wade.
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beaujoe | otra reseña | May 3, 2009 |
3061 Byron:The Flawed Angel, by Phyllis Grosskurth (read 15 Mar 1998) Even though I have read Leslie Marchand's masterful three-volume biography of Byron I decided to read this. I can't say I was overly enthralled by this book. The author really does not spend much time in analysis of Byron's writings, and maybe that is OK for his obscure works, but some of his famous work I thought could have been more thoroughly discussed. Grosskurth is so absorbed in Byron's flamboyant and tumultuous life that the book gives his poetry inadequate attention. But the book was enjoyable in a way though, since there is so much I want to read, I am not sure this was worth reading since Marchand's work covered Byron's life so adequately.… (más)
 
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Schmerguls | otra reseña | Dec 22, 2007 |

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Obras
11
Miembros
440
Popularidad
#55,641
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
39
Idiomas
3

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