Tradition and the Individual Poem: An Inquiry into Anthologies

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Stanford University Press, 2001 - 289 páginas
Anthologies have been a powerful force in poetry and criticism in English ever since the earliest extant book of this kind was published in the sixteenth century. A theoretical, historical, and critical inquiry, Anne Ferry's book looks in detail at the assumptions anthologies are predicated on, how they are put together, the treatment of the poems in them, and the effects their presentations have on their readers' experiences of the poems.

In an anthology the work of many poets is selected and arranged by someone whose aim is to make, out of the writings of others, a book of which the anthologist is the author. Part I explains the classifying terms and defining dimensions--conceptual, spatial, temporal--that make the anthology a unique kind of book. It also explores and illustrates the ways that the presence of the anthologist--in arranging, annotating, titling, and revising the poems--directs how they are read. As examples, Ferry focuses on the three most historically influential of anthologies: Richard Tottel's Songes and Sonettes, Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, and Francis Palgrave's The Golden Treasury.

Part II asks how the poems most frequently included in anthologies get there: by what cultural situations, literary circumstances, and internal features. Examples include a group of Renaissance pastoral lyrics, three public poems of 1770, 1867, and 1955, and Elizabeth Bishop's narrative-descriptive poem "The Fish." Part III describes how poets themselves, as readers and compilers of anthologies, have used them, and how anthologies have contributed to the making of poems and the making of their reception. A Coda shows how T. S. Eliot wove certain of his writings into an imaginary anthology that figures his conception of tradition and the individual talent.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Questions and premises I
1
Anthologies as a kind
13
The disposition of the space
39
The anthologist in the poem
69
Elizabethan and seventeenth
101
public poems of 1770 1867 1955
125
the anthologizing
161
Poets as anthology readers
193
Poets as anthology makers
220
Derechos de autor

Términos y frases comunes

Referencias a este libro

John Donne in the Nineteenth Century
Dayton Haskin
Sin vista previa disponible - 2007

Acerca del autor (2001)

Anne Ferry has taught at Hunter, Wellesley, and Boston colleges, Harvard University, and M.I.T. Her most recent book, The Title to the Poem (Stanford, 1996), received the Christian Gauss Award of the Phi Beta Kappa Association.

Información bibliográfica