Inscription and Modernity: From Wordsworth to MandelstamIndiana University Press, 2006 M09 19 - 320 páginas Inscription and Modernity charts the vicissitudes of inscriptive poetry produced in the midst of the great and catastrophic political, social, and intellectual upheavals of the late 18th to mid 20th centuries. Drawing on the ideas of Geoffrey Hartman, Perry Anderson, Fredric Jameson, and Jacques Rancière among others, John MacKay shows how a wide range of Romantic and post-Romantic poets (including Wordsworth, Clare, Shelley, Hölderlin, Lamartine, Baudelaire, Blok, Khlebnikov, Mandelstam, and Rolf Dieter Brinkmann) employ the generic resources of inscription both to justify their writing and to attract a readership, during a complex historical phase when the rationale for poetry and the identity of audiences were matters of intense yet productive doubt. |
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... effect some sort of surprise by virtue of their sheer , unexpected , and witless familiarity . At the same time , it would seem that the guarantor of this authentic triteness is not popular reception ( however measured ) but rather the ...
... effect upon Baudelaire , is notoriously ambiguous . His political career is marked , on the one hand , by support of religious authority , public rejection of the red banner in favor of the tricolor , absurd , providential mysticism ...
... effect . Organizations , as the experience of modernization continues to show , are about enabling deeds or events to happen — that is , they are about the future — and are basi- cally indifferent to survival in the organismic sense ...
Contenido
Being and Structure in | 39 |
Poetry Self and Society in | 94 |
Poetry and Modernization | 140 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Inscription and Modernity: From Wordsworth to Mandelstam John Kenneth MacKay Vista previa limitada - 2006 |
Inscription and Modernity: From Wordsworth to Mandelstam John Kenneth MacKay Vista de fragmentos - 2006 |