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A gordian shape of dazzling hue - Serpent Symbolism in Keats's Poetry

English · Paperback / Softback

Description

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Serpent symbolism plays an important role in Keats's rich animal imagery both on a quantitative level and on a qualitative one. Through images of dazzling, twisted, suffocating snakes Keats gives form to some of his most important ideas as well as anxieties about poetic creation. In particular, snakes convey the tension between the more unconscious and the more conscious elements of the creative psyche, which is reflected in the linguistic texture of the poems. Besides, serpent symbolism shows how Keats's initial complete adhesion to the predominant Romantic view of the time was complicated and reinterpreted in highly personal terms. By recovering some Augustan notions, this young poet attempted a partial, problematic re-appropriation of the recent past Romanticism had utterly dismissed.


About the author










After graduating in 2016, Dr Greta Colombani is attending a MA degree in Euro-American Literatures and Philologies at the University of Pisa while being also a student at Scuola Normale Superiore.


Product details

Authors Greta Colombani
Publisher V & R Unipress GmbH
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.10.2017
 
No. of pages 126
Dimensions 156 mm x 231 mm x 10 mm
Weight 205 g
Series Passages - Transitions - Intersections
Passages – Transitions – Intersections
Passages - Transitions - Intersections
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > English linguistics / literary studies

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