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Wordsworth and the Enlightenment - Nature, Man, and Society in the Experimental Poetry (Hardcover, New)
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Wordsworth and the Enlightenment - Nature, Man, and Society in the Experimental Poetry (Hardcover, New)
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This book provides a new context for understanding Wordsworth's
major poetry by examining the poet's response to Enlightenment
attitudes toward nature and society. Alan Bewell argues that at the
core of Wordsworth's poetry is an anthropological vision, a concern
with how human beings first made the transition from nature to
society. In substantially new interpretations of the early Prelude
and many of the shorter poems, Bewell suggest that Wordsworth's
major objective as a poet was to write a history of the
imagination, which would show the role it has played in human
progress and the genesis of social institutions. The various fields
comprised in Enlightenment anthropology provided Wordsworth with a
model for how such a history might proceed. In eighteenth-century
ethnography, geology, environmental theory, and biblical studies,
in philosophical inquiries into the genesis of myths, the
supernatural, and the idea of death, he found discursive models for
talking about human origins. Moral philosophy also constituted a
powerful discourse on marginal individuals, which underlies
Wordsworth's interest in writing about outcasts and beggars, idiots
and savages, the blind, the deaf, and the mute. Bewell argues that
Wordsworth identified with and fashioned his self-understanding out
of his observation of these individuals; the shift to autobiography
in his later works was thus toward a complementary mode of
anthropological inquiry.
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