Front cover image for The ethics of mourning : grief and responsibility in elegiac literature

The ethics of mourning : grief and responsibility in elegiac literature

"Beginning from a reevaluation of famously inconsolable mourners ranging from Niobe to Hamlet, R. Clifton Spargo discerns the tendency of all grief to depend at least temporarily upon the refusal of consolation. By disrupting the traditional social and psychological functions of grief, the resistant mourner transforms mourning into a profoundly ethical act. Spargo finds such examples of ethical mourning in opposition to socially acceptable expressions of grief throughout the English and American elegiac tradition. Drawing on the work of Paul Ricoeur, Bernard Williams, and Emmanuel Levinas, his book explores the ethical dimensions of anti-consolatory grief through astute readings of a wide range of texts - including Hamlet and works by Milton and Renaissance elegists; more recent poetry by Dickinson, Shelley, and Hardy; and American Holocaust elegies by Sylvia Plath and Randall Jarrell."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2004
Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Md., 2004
Criticism, interpretation, etc
x, 314 pages ; 24 cm
9780801879777, 0801879779
54079825
Toward an ethics of mourning
Mourning and substitution in Hamlet
Lyrical economy and the question of alterity
The ethical rhetoric of anti-elegy
Wishful reciprocity in Thomas Hardy's Poems of 1912-13
The bad conscience of American holocaust elegy : the example of Randall Jarrell
The holocaust she walks in : Sylvia Plath and the demise of lyrical selfhood