Fr. 69.00

Romantic Fiat - Demystification and Enchantment in Lyric Poetry

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext "In the course of the volume! Lindstrom gathers an impressive number of 'let be' statements . . . From discussions of Wordsworth's 'Tintern Abbey' and 'The Old Cumberland Beggar' to Shelley's Peter Bell and Byron's Don Juan! the book accomplishes something that is all too rare in scholarship . . . the book changes what one notices in a poetry that has become all too familiar . . . I conclude with an injunction: 'do not let this book be!' by which I mean! read this book." - Studies in Romanticism Informationen zum Autor ERIC REID LINDSTROM is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at the University of Vermont, USA. His publications include articles in Literary Imagination and Studies in Romanticism - this is his first book. Klappentext In the Romantic period's economics of 'fiat' money the legacy of romanticism involves absolutist gestures of verbal fiat. Focused on William Wordsworth, but in constant range of his poet-successors and modern critics, Romantic Fiat presents an argument for a double romantic signature of 'let there be' and 'let be.' Zusammenfassung In the Romantic period's economics of 'fiat' money the legacy of romanticism involves absolutist gestures of verbal fiat. Focused on William Wordsworth, but in constant range of his poet-successors and modern critics, Romantic Fiat presents an argument for a double romantic signature of 'let there be' and 'let be.' Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgments Introduction: Fiat in Lyric PART I: GIVING COMMANDS AND LETTING GO Romanticism and 'Exaggeration of Thought' The Command to Nature  Wordsworth's Useless Fiat in The Old Cumberland Beggar PART II: ONTOLOGY AND THE LYRIC Between Cant and Anguish: Hume in Coleridge's Imagination  Wordsworth and the Beautiful Day PART III: BLESSING CURSING Contracting Obi: Shelley's Cosmopolitanism and the Curse of Poetry  Paper Money Poets Coda: Nature Poets and Fiat Money Index

List of contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: Fiat in Lyric PART I: GIVING COMMANDS AND LETTING GO Romanticism and 'Exaggeration of Thought' The Command to Nature Wordsworth's Useless Fiat in The Old Cumberland Beggar PART II: ONTOLOGY AND THE LYRIC Between Cant and Anguish: Hume in Coleridge's Imagination Wordsworth and the Beautiful Day PART III: BLESSING CURSING Contracting Obi: Shelley's Cosmopolitanism and the Curse of Poetry Paper Money Poets Coda: Nature Poets and Fiat Money Index

Report

"In the course of the volume, Lindstrom gathers an impressive number of 'let be' statements . . . From discussions of Wordsworth's 'Tintern Abbey' and 'The Old Cumberland Beggar' to Shelley's Peter Bell and Byron's Don Juan, the book accomplishes something that is all too rare in scholarship . . . the book changes what one notices in a poetry that has become all too familiar . . . I conclude with an injunction: 'do not let this book be,' by which I mean, read this book." - Studies in Romanticism

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