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Formal Charges - The Shaping of Poetry in British Romanticism (Paperback, illustrated edition)
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Formal Charges - The Shaping of Poetry in British Romanticism (Paperback, illustrated edition)
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Why care about poetic form and its intricacies, other than in
nostalgia for a bygone era of criticism? The purpose of this book
is to refresh today this care for criticism, applying a
historically aware formalist reading to poetic form in Romanticism
and showing how in theory and practice Romantic writers addressed,
debated, tested, and contested fundamental questions about what is
at stake in the poetic forming of language. In the process, it
suggests the importance of these conflicted inquiries for
contemporary critical discussion and demonstrates the pleasures of
attending to the complex changes of form in poetic writing.
After an introductory chapter on the controversies about poetic
form and formalism from the Romantic era to our own, succeeding
chapters consider particular instances in Romantic poetry in which
experimental agendas or unsettled traditions promote an awareness
of new textual possibilities. The author shows how Blake's"
Poetical Sketches" predicts many of the key issues of Romantic
theory and practice, and how Coleridge's ambivalent engagement with
simile impels him to address the very foundations of poetic form. A
chapter on Wordsworth's revision of an episode in" The Prelude"
demonstrates how a repeated reworking of form virtually
characterizes the work of autobiography, and the dilemma of
self-formation is also the focus of a chapter on Byron's seemingly
perverse choice of the heroic couplet in "The Corsair."
Keats, too, is shown to wrestle with the issue of self and form at
the end of his career in his personal lyrics to Fanny Browne, which
subverted the formalism of the "Great Odes" of 1819, the celebrated
icons of New Criticism. A final chapter describes Shelley's
investment of poetic performance with social agency in two
seemingly opposite but related modes--the political exhortation of
"The Mask of Anarchy" and the intimate addresses to Jane and Edward
Williams. In an afterword, the author reviews recent attacks on
formalist criticism and argues for the specific value of shaped
language as one of the texts in which culture is written and
revised.
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