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Coleridge, Wordsworth, and the Language of Allusion

Autor Lucy Newlyn
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 mar 2001
In this study of two creative minds, Lucy Newlyn offers a new version of the Coleridge-Wordsworth interaction during its most crucial years: 1797-1807. Rejecting all those accounts (including the poets' own) which have sought to construe difference as compatibility, Newlyn argues that it is only on the surface that each poet appears the other's ideal audience. Below the surface, there were radical differences, of a theoretical and imaginative kind, which led to misunderstanding. It is the central argument of Coleridge, Wordsworth, and the Language of Allusion that such 'misunderstanding' was creative and, for both poets, a means of self-definition. The key to this interpretation is in the poets' private language: they were not only 'men speaking to men', but poets speaking to poets, and it is in their use of literary allusion that their tacit opposition emerges. Indeed, by examining the range of strategies open to any writer using private allusion, Newlyn's study reveals this mode to be potentially the most aggressive of literary forms.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780199242597
ISBN-10: 0199242593
Pagini: 274
Dimensiuni: 139 x 217 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

Lucy Newlyn has a marvellously sharp eye for such echoes and allusions and the intricacy of her observations is constantly illuminating.
Review from previous edition 'Lucy Newlyn has a marvellously sharp eye for such echoes and allusions and the intricacy of her observations is constantly illuminating.'

Notă biografică

Lucy Newlyn is Lecturer in English, St Edmunds Hall, Oxford and author of Reading, Writing, and Romanticism and Paradise Losty and the Romantic Reader.