TY - BOOK ID - 3378177 TI - Blake and Kierkegaard : creation and anxiety PY - 2010 VL - *10 SN - 9781441135599 9781441114525 1441135596 1441114521 1441178066 1474211267 128257681X 9786612576812 9781474211260 6612576812 9781441178060 9781441136770 1441136770 PB - London New York Continuum DB - UniCat KW - Literature KW - Anxiety in literature. KW - Littérature KW - Angoisse dans la littérature KW - Philosophy. KW - Philosophie KW - Blake, William, KW - Kierkegaard, Sren, KW - Criticism and interpretation. KW - Blake, William, --1757-1827 --Criticism and interpretation. KW - Creation in literature. KW - Kierkegaard, Søren, --1813-1855. KW - Literature --Philosophy. KW - Creation in literature KW - Anxiety in literature KW - English KW - English Literature KW - Languages & Literatures KW - Philosophy KW - Kierkegaard, Søren, KW - Littérature KW - Angoisse dans la littérature KW - Literature and philosophy KW - Philosophy and literature KW - Theory KW - Anti-Climacus, KW - Bogbinder, Hilarius, KW - Chʻi-kʻo-kuo, KW - Climacus, Johannes, KW - Constantius, Constantin, KW - Eremita, Victor, KW - Haufniensis, Vigilius, KW - Johannes, Climacus, KW - Johannes de Silentio, KW - Kʹerkegor, Seren, KW - Kierkegaard, S. KW - Kierkegaard, Severino, KW - Kierkegaard, Søren Aabye, KW - Kierkegaard, Søren KW - K'i︠e︡rkegor, Sʹoren, KW - Kīrkajūrd, Sūrīn, KW - Kirkegaard, Soeren, KW - Kirkegor, Seren, KW - Ḳirḳegor, Sern, KW - Kirkegors, Sērens, KW - Kirukegōru, Søren, KW - Kjerkegor, Seren, KW - Kʻo-erh-kʻai-ko-erh, KW - Notabene, Nicolaus, KW - Silentio, Johannes de, KW - Sūrīn Kīrkajūrd, KW - Victor, Eremita, KW - Vigilius, Haufniensis, KW - קירקגור, סרן KW - קירקגור, סורן KW - קירקגור, סירן KW - קירקגור, סירן, KW - קירקגורד, סרן, KW - 克尓凯郭尓, KW - Blake, W. KW - Bleĭk, Uilʹi︠a︡m, KW - בליק, ויליאם KW - בלייק, ויליאם KW - בליק, ויליאם, KW - בלייק, ויליאם, KW - Anti-climacus KW - H. H. KW - Блейк, Уильям, KW - Blake, William KW - Blake, William, 1757-1827 UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:3378177 AB - Apocalyptic nightmares that humanly-created intelligences will one day rise up against their creators haunt the western creative imagination. However, these narratives find their initial expression not in the widely disseminated Frankenstein story but in William Blake's early mythological works. This book looks at why we persistently fear our own creations by examining Blake's illuminated books of the 1790's through the lens of Kierkegaard's theories of personality and of anxiety. It offers a close examination of Kierkegaard's and Blake's similar, and to an extent shared, historical milieux as ER -