Wordsworth's Art of AllusionPennsylvania State University Press, 1988 - 262 páginas Wordsworth's poetry incorporated the English poetic tradition to a greater degree and in more ways than that of any poet before him. This book explores the range and uses of quotations, echoes, and allusions drawn from some 1,300 intertextual instances that the author has recognized in his work. The principal interest of the echoes examined here lies in the revaluation of the poet and the theoretical issues his varied use of them suggests. Through echoing, Wordsworth embodies and explicates his assertions of continuity in human development, his vision of interchange between the mind and nature, and his intention to revitalize English poetry by at once mediating and revolutionizing the tradition. Further, through echoic devices he accomplishes his three main poetic goals--the normative one of bringing poetry back in touch with oral discourse, the Miltonic one of giving it a prophetic role, and the peculiarly Wordsworthian one of substantiating his ideas about the relation between subject and object. This book will be of value to Wordsworth scholars for the actual borrowings it records and for the enriched understanding of the poet its original approach offers. Further, it possesses a truly wide-based cultural interest, not only in its general theory of echoing as a process central to discourse but specifically in such matters as the turn to native tradition vs. classic tradition, the difference between weak emulation and fierce wrestling with precursors, and, above all, the extraordinary classification of allusions. The categories are helpful fare beyond the Wordsworth subject matter that gave rise to their perception. Important also is the major theoretical challenge posed by this work to the intensely focused influence study of Harold Bloom. |
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... Remembrance of Collins " seem to me Bowlesian in character : And see how dark the backward stream ! A little moment past so smiling ! And still , perhaps , with faithless gleam , Some other loiterers beguiling . Such views the youthful ...
... Remembrance of Collins " ( " Glide gently , thus for ever glide , / O Thames ! " ) cannot fail to suggest the famous refrain of Spenser's " Prothalamion " : " Sweete Themmes , runne softly , till I end my song . " But there are as well ...
... Remembrance of Collins ” are not likely to be conscious of the wealth of things echoed in it ; even Wordsworth was not thinking at every moment in composition of all the relevant possibilities in the tradition . Yet I believe that the ...
Contenido
Using the Tradition | 19 |
Echo as Genesis and Mediation | 42 |
Wordsworth and the Renaissance Heritage | 83 |
Derechos de autor | |
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