The Modern Poet: Poetry, Academia, and Knowledge since the 1750sOUP Oxford, 9.08.2001 г. - 306 страници Addressed to all readers of poetry, this is a wide-ranging book about the poet's role throughout the last three centuries. It argues that a conception of the poets as both primitive and sophisticated emerged in the 1750s. Encouraged by the classroom when English literary works began to be studied in universities, this view continues to shape our own attitudes towards verse. Whether considering Ossian and the Romantics, Victorian scholar-gipsies, Modernist poetries of knowledge, or contemporary poetry in Britian, Ireland, and America, The Modern Poet shows how many successive generations of poets have needed to collaborate and to battle with academia. |
Съдържание
The Birth of the Modern Poet | 30 |
Making a National Body of Poetry | 70 |
ScholarGypsies | 113 |
Modernist Cybernetics and the Poetry of Knowledge | 170 |
Men Women and American Classrooms | 223 |
The Poets Work | 267 |
285 | |
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academic American anthologies Arthur Hugh Clough Auden audience booksellers Bothie British Poets Cambridge canon Celtic Twilight century chapter Clampitt classical Clough Collected College contemporary creative writing criticism cultural cybernetic Dowden early edition Edwin Morgan eighteenth-century English Literature English Poets English Studies epic essay Ezra Pound Faber & Faber fragments Gaelic Ginsberg Glasgow Harvard Highland Hugh Blair I. A. Richards Ibid institutional John judgement language Larkin later learning lectures linked literary London Lowell MacDiarmid Macpherson Matthew Arnold modern poet modernist multivolume Orators poet poet's poetic poetry and academia poetry of knowledge preface present primitive produced Professor prose published quoted readers Rhetoric and Belles-Lettres Robert Crawford Robert Frost Romantic Scholar-Gypsy Scotland Scots Scottish sense Shairp St Andrews Stones Stones's student T. S. Eliot teaching texts translation verse Victorian voice volumes W. B. Yeats W. H. Auden Waste Land wild William word Yeats's
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Страница 5 - And first, truly, to all them that, professing learning, inveigh against poetry may justly be objected that they go very near to ungratefulness to seek to deface that which, in the noblest nations and languages that are known, hath been the first lightgiver to ignorance...