Lyric Poetry: Beyond New CriticismChaviva Hošek, Patricia A. Parker |
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Page 185
... reading . The reading I will present of Blake's “ A Poison Tree " is guided by three sets of propositions intended to sharpen this dialogue between critical social theory and contemporary literary theory : ( 1 ) The social dialectic of ...
... reading . The reading I will present of Blake's “ A Poison Tree " is guided by three sets of propositions intended to sharpen this dialogue between critical social theory and contemporary literary theory : ( 1 ) The social dialectic of ...
Page 187
... reading by arguing that the phrase " glad I see " is not really in the present tense , but rather is an elliptical construction for something like " glad I was to see . " But the amoral reading of the poem draws on other aspects of its ...
... reading by arguing that the phrase " glad I see " is not really in the present tense , but rather is an elliptical construction for something like " glad I was to see . " But the amoral reading of the poem draws on other aspects of its ...
Page 201
... Reading the Songs of Innocence lyrically , as we must if we take them in isolation , is quite different from reading them interdiscursively , in such a way that the complementary poems be- come interlocutors which transform lyrical ...
... Reading the Songs of Innocence lyrically , as we must if we take them in isolation , is quite different from reading them interdiscursively , in such a way that the complementary poems be- come interlocutors which transform lyrical ...
Contents
Preface | 7 |
NORTHROP FRYE | 31 |
Changes in the Study of the Lyric | 38 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic allegory apostrophe Auden Baudelaire Baudelaire's beauty becomes Brooks called Chicago Cleanth Brooks Clere context Criticism Culler death Deconstruction desire difference discourse dramatic monologue echo English epitaph essay fiction figure Frye Gace Brulé genre Haven hear hypogram ideal imagination interpretation intertextuality Jauss Jonathan Culler Jonson Keats Keats's kind language literary literature London lyric poetry M. H. Abrams Mallarmé meaning metaphor Michael Riffaterre Milton mind mode modern muse narrative nature Northrop Frye parody Peter Quince Pindaric poem poem's poet poet's poetic praise Prelude prosopopoeia question reader reading refrain rhetorical Riffaterre Riffaterre's Romantic Romanticism Semiotics sense Shakespeare's signifier social song sound speak speaker stanza Stevens's structure suggests Surrey Surrey's Susanna symbol tercet textual theory thing tion tradition trans trope trouvère trouvère lyric turn Under-wood University Press utterance verbal visionary voice Wallace Stevens word Wordsworth writing York young man sonnets