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  1. 21 de dic. de 2022 · Edward Carpenter was born in 1844 in Brighton to a middle-class naval family. He grew up with nine siblings. All of his brothers pursued careers in the armed forces, while he decided to go to university. He was admitted to Cambridge University in 1864. In 1867 Carpenter was offered a clerical fellowship at Trinity Hall, Cambridge. He accepted and was ordained into holy orders.

  2. Le tableau dépeint en fait l’Angleterre de la fin du XIXe siècle dans l’œuvre du poète et philosophe anglais Edward Carpenter. Une série de neuf de ses essais, regroupés en un livre publié en 1887, vient de sortir dans une nouvelle traduction française intitulée Vers une vie simple (L’échappée, février 2020).

  3. 9 de jun. de 2020 · One dawning July morning in 1870, at the insomniac peal of 4 A.M. — which Baldwin considered the hour of despair, reckoning, and self-redemption — a young English man who would become the philosopher, poet, and early LGBT rights activist Edward Carpenter (August 29, 1844–June 28, 1929) picked up his pen and his courage, and composed an extraordinary letter to Walt Whitman.

  4. Edward Carpenter was born in Brighton on 29 August 1844 (at 45 Brunswick Square) into a comfortable, middle-class family. There were 10 children in total: six girls and four boys; by the time Edward was in his teenage years he was the only boy along with his six sisters in the house. The family took a year abroad in Versailles in 1857 and the ...

  5. 24 de feb. de 2022 · Edward Carpenter was not an obvious recruit to the class struggle. Born in 1844, he had been brought up in an upper-class Brighton family and graduated from Cambridge, becoming first an Anglican curate and then a lecturer in University Extension, an adult education movement.

  6. Edward Carpenter, né le 29 août 1844 à Hove et mort le 28 juin 1929 à Guildford, est un poète et philosophe anglais, militant socialiste libertaire et pour les droits des homosexuels. Issu d'une riche famille de Brighton, il fit de brillantes études à Cambridge. Ordonné pasteur anglican en 1870, il quitta les ordres en 1874.

  7. Carpenter appealed both as a poet and as an exemplar. Writing in To-day in 1886, Edward Pease argued that poetry should be an act of exposition. Walt Whitman was the model, but he saw Edward Carpenter’s Towards Democracy as in the same idiom: ‘Every line of his work is modern, grandly modern.’4