Mary Ellis Gibson is Arthur Jeremiah Roberts Professor of Literature at Colby College. Her books include Indian Angles: English Verse in Colonial India from Jones to Tagore (Ohio, 2011); History and the Prism of Art: Browning's Poetic Experiments; and Epic Reinvented: Ezra Pound and the Victorians. She has also edited several other anthologies, including New Stories by Southern Women; Homeplaces: Stories of the South by Women Writers; and Critical Essays on Robert Browning.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
"This is genuinely groundbreaking work: ambitiously conceived, suggestively presented, and potentially paradigm-shifting." - Tricia Lootens, author of Lost Saints: Silence, Gender, and Victorian Literary Canonization "Indian Angles showcases and reflects the vibrant poetry culture of India in the nineteenth century and therein lies its contribution to the scholarship of that period." (Victorian Studies) "Both of Gibson's books (Indian Angles and Anglophone Poetry in Colonial India) stand as shining examples of the strategic comparativist work needed to assess the full array of literary voices in/on India during the long nineteenth century." (English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920) "In this thoroughly researched, well-theorized study, Gibson traces the rise of English-language poetics in India from the late 18th century to the early 20th. She acknowledges the complex, changing identity politics informing colonial affiliation, showing how poets of British, Indian, or mixed origin and affiliation were involved in the complementary project of establishing Anglo-Indian poetics.... Summing Up: Highly recommended." (Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries) "Asserting that poetry-rather than prose fiction-dominated English-language writing in India for most of the nineteenth century, Indian Angles examines 'the rise and expansion of English language poetics in India,'...." (Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900)