Thinking Through Poetry - Marjorie Levinson

Thinking Through Poetry

Field Reports on Romantic Lyric
Buch | Hardcover
344 Seiten
2018
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-881031-5 (ISBN)
113,45 inkl. MwSt
Thinking Through Poetry is a work of and about literary criticism. It offers new readings of poems from the canon of British Romanticism and it narrates, enacts, and theorizes the arc of the scholarship on that field from the 1980s through the present.
Thinking through Poetry: Field Reports on Romantic Lyric pursues two goals. The title signals the contribution to debates about reading. Do we think 'through' - 'by means of', 'with'- poems, sympathetically elaborating their surfaces? Is this compatible with a second meaning: 'thinking through' poems to their end-solving a problem, getting to its root, its deep truth? Third, can we square these surface and depth readings with a speculative, philosophical criticism to which the poem carries us, where 'through' denotes a 'going beyond?' All three meanings of 'through' are in play throughout.

The subtitle applies 'field' first to Romantic studies since the 1980s, a field that this project reflects upon from beginning to end. Examples are drawn especially from Wordsworth, but also from Coleridge and, in assessing Romanticism's afterlife, from Stevens. 'Field' also characterizes the shift from a unitary to a field-concept of form during that time-span, a shift pursued through prolonged engagement with Spinoza. 'Field' thus underscores the synthesis of form and history, the importance of analytic scale to that synthesis, and the displacement of entity (text) by 'relation' as the object of investigation.

While the book historically connects early nineteenth-century intellectual trends to twentieth- and twenty-first-century scientific revolutions, its focuses on introducing new models to literary criticism. Unlike accounts of the influence of science on literature, or various 'literature + X' approaches (literature and ecology, literature and cognitive science), it constructs its object of inquiry in a way cognate with work in non-humanities disciplines, thus highlighting a certain unity to human knowledge. The claim is that specialists in literature should think the way distinguished scientists think, and vice versa.

Marjorie Levinson is F. L. Huetwell Professor of English at the University of Michigan, where she has taught since 1991. Prior to that she was a professor at the University of Pennsylvania, 1978-1991. She is the author of The Romantic Fragment Poem, Wordsworth's Great Period Poems, and Keats's Life of Allegory, and the editor of Rethinking Historicism. She has written numerous articles on Romantic and modern poetry and on critical theory (e.g., 'What is New Formalism?'). Her work tracks a transition from sociocultural critique to models derived from the postclassical physical and biological sciences.

1: Introduction: Crooked Lines and Moving Targets
Part 1. Theory: Materialism against Itself
2: The New Historicism: Back to the Future
3: Romantic Poetry: The State of the Art
4: Pre- and Post-Dialectical Materialism: Modeling Praxis Without Subjects and Objects
5: A Motion and a Spirit: Romancing Spinoza
6: What is New Formalism?
Part 2. Criticism: Field Theories of Form
7: Of Being Numerous
8: Notes and Queries on Names and Numbers
9: Parsing the Frost: The Growth of a Poet's Sentence in

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 5 Illustrations
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 163 x 242 mm
Gewicht 687 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
ISBN-10 0-19-881031-8 / 0198810318
ISBN-13 978-0-19-881031-5 / 9780198810315
Zustand Neuware
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