With Wallace Stevens emerging as a father figure for American
poetry of the late twentieth century, Mark Halliday argues that it
is time for this "poet of ideas" to undergo an ethical critique. In
this bold, accessible reconsideration of Stevens' work, he insists
on the importance of interpersonal relations in any account of
human life in the modern world. Although Stevens outwardly denies
aspects of life that center on such relations as those between
friends, lovers, family members, and political constituents,
Halliday uncovers in his poetry an anxious awareness of the
importance of these relations. Here we see the difficulties Stevens
made for himself in wanting to offer a thoroughly satisfying
version of secular spiritual health in the modern world without
facing up to the moral and psychological implications of his own
interpersonal needs, problems, and responsibilities. The final
chapter reveals, however, an unusually encouraging "avuncular"
attitude toward the reader of the poetry, which may be felt to
redeem Stevens from the alienation observed earlier. Halliday
develops his views by way of comparisons between Stevens and other
poets, especially Thomas Hardy, Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, and
John Ashbery.
Originally published in 1991.
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