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Matthew Rowlinson proposes a revitalized and properly analytic
formalism as the appropriate model for a reading of Tennyson. In a
series of attentive close readings, he probes the nature of place
and the structuring of desire in Tennyson's work. Focusing on the
poet's most important early writings - fragments and poems produced
between 1824 and 1833 - Rowlinson conflates deconstructive theory
with psychoanalytic insights. The author begins by observing that
the subjectivities articulated in these poems, from the strangely
passive poet-seer of the ""Armageddon"" fragments to the embowered
singers of ""Mariana,"" ""The Lady of Shalott,"" and ""The
Hesperides"" to the absconding monarch of ""Ulysses,"" are all
constituted in relation to ruined, abandoned, or inaccessible
places. The placing of the subject allegorizes its relation to the
signifier as well as to the discursive structures within which the
signifier comes into being. On this premise, Rowlinson takes up
Lacan's claim that it is through the signifier that it is through
the signifier that all human desire is mediated. In the placement
of the subjects he reads a distinctively Tennysonian articulation
of desire. Following Paul de Man, Rowlinson demonstrates that
allegory comes into being only with a structure of repetition. He
has developed a formalist poetics that provides a psychoanalytic
account of the most basic figurative and formal devices - allegory,
metaphor, rhyme, and metre - and he offers an explication and
critique of major concepts in Lacanian and Freudian psychoanalytic
theory, including the gaze, the castration complex, the death
drive, and the compulsion to repeat. By returning to the
deconstruction, the author has resumed the challenges English
studies took up in the 1970s and left incomplete in its rush to
historicism. His readings offer fresh insights at the level of
theory.
Real Money and Romanticism interprets poetry and fiction by Sir
Walter Scott, John Keats, and Charles Dickens in the context of
changes in the British monetary system and in the broader economy
during the early nineteenth century. In this period modern systems
of paper money and intellectual property became established;
Matthew Rowlinson describes the consequent changes in relations
between writers and publishers and shows how a new conception of
material artefacts as the bearers of abstract value shaped Romantic
conceptions of character, material culture, and labor. A fresh and
radically different contribution to the growing field of inquiry
into the 'economics' of literature, this is an ingenious and
challenging reading of Romantic discourse from the point of view of
monetary theory and history.
Real Money and Romanticism interprets poetry and fiction by Sir
Walter Scott, John Keats, and Charles Dickens in the context of
changes in the British monetary system and in the broader economy
during the early nineteenth century. In this period modern systems
of paper money and intellectual property became established;
Matthew Rowlinson describes the consequent changes in relations
between writers and publishers and shows how a new conception of
material artifacts as the bearers of abstract value shaped Romantic
conceptions of character, material culture, and labor. A fresh and
radically different contribution to the growing field of inquiry
into the 'economics' of literature, this is an ingenious and
challenging reading of Romantic discourse from the point of view of
monetary theory and history.
Matthew Rowlinson has given us the most penetrating analysis of
Tennyson's poetry to date. He proposes a revitalized and properly
analytic formalism as the appropriate model for reading of
Tennyson. In a series of original, scrupulously attentive, and
sophisticated close readings, he probes the nature of place and the
structuring of desire in Tennyson's work. Focusing on the poet's
most important early writings- fragments and poems produced from
1824 to 1833- Rowlinson conflates deconstructive theory with
psychoanalytic insights.
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In Memoriam (Paperback)
Alfred Lord Tennyson; Edited by Matthew Rowlinson
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R704
Discovery Miles 7 040
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Published in 1850, "In Memoriam" won its author the Poet
Laureateship of Britain and received widespread attention from
critics and reviewers, as well as ordinary readers. The poem was
written in memory of Tennyson's close friend Arthur Henry Hallam,
who died suddenly in 1833; it became a kind of unofficial
devotional manual for mourners, including Queen Victoria after the
death of Prince Albert. The poem's scope goes beyond individual
grief, however, to the development and extinction of species,
audaciously exploring history, evolution and God's relationship
with humanity. Its formal beauty and emotional resonance make "In
Memoriam" as compelling today as it was for nineteenth-century
readers. Matthew Rowlinson's introduction traces the poem's
composition history and places it in the context of Tennyson's
personal and intellectual development. Historical appendices
include writings by Arthur Hallam, Victorian fiction on courtship
and marriage and materials on natural history and evolution.
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