Poetic Language: Theory and Practice from the Renaissance to the Present
Author(s): Tom Jones (Author)
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication Date: 4 July 2012
Language: English
Print length: 240 pages
ISBN-10: 0748656170
ISBN-13: 9780748656172
Book Description
The first study of poetic language from a historical and philosophical perspective. In a series of 12 chapters, exemplary poems – by Walter Ralegh, John Milton, William Cowper, William Wordsworth, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Wallace Stevens, Ezra Pound, Frank O’Hara, Robert Creeley, W. S. Graham, Tom Raworth, Denise Riley and Thomas A. Clark – are read alongside theoretical discussions of poetic language. The discussions provide a jargon-free account of a wide range of historical and contemporary schools of thought about poetic language, and an organised, coherent critique of those schools (including analytical philosophy, cognitive poetics, structuralism and post-structuralism). Via close readings of whole poems from 1600 to the present readers are taken through a wide range of modernist, experimental and innovative poetries. Paired chapters within a chronological structure allow lecturers and students to approach the material in a variety of ways (by individual chapters, paired historical periods) that are appropriate to different courses.
Tom Jones teaches English at the University of St Andrews, specialising in eighteenth-century literature and philosophy, and poetic theory and practice.