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H.D. : sublimity and beauty in her early work (1912-1925)Romon-Alonso, Mercedes January 1998 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to study the poetry written by H.D. between 1912- 1925 in relation to two Romantic categories: beauty and sublimity. I shall attempt to show how H.D. subverts and revises the Romantic sublime offering alternatives that can be identified with a "female sublime". A direct consequence of such revision will be her commitment to beauty, which acts in her poems as a generative drive. Her understanding of beauty will be shown to have its roots in Sappho, Plato and the Victorian Hellenists, among others, and to have undergone analogous transformations to those of sublimity. Chapter I reopens the debate around Imagism and Imagist poetry showing that the problem of defining what Imagism is or was originates in the overwhelming authority of theory versus praxis. My goal is to deconstruct the critical fallacies on which Imagism has been built and to free the poetry which it represents. This allows me to question the myth of H.D. as "Imagiste" and to open her early poetry to new readings and interpretations. In Chapter n, I review the theoretical background to the aesthetics of the sublime represented by Longinus, Burke, Kant and Wordsworth. I also establish the critical frame within which this research will take place, drawing on Thomas Weiskel, Patricia Yaeger and Joanne Diehl. I initiate a study of sublimity in H.D.'s first volume, Sea Garden, and show the alternative treatment that this Romantic genre receives from this female poet. H.D.'s revisions of the Romantic sublime take us in Chapter m to a study of her poetics, as presented in her essay "Notes on Thought and Vision". I discuss a variety of sources for the composition of these "Notes", such as Havelock Ellis' influence, H.D.'s letters to John Cournos and her friendship with D.H. Lawrence. I show how H.D. understands artistic and poetic creativity as 'vision' and how the recovery of the abject female body allows her to formulate a notion of creativity that transcends gender. Chapter IV, pursues H.D.'s transformations of the Romantic sublime in Hymen, and presents Sappho as a model for the fusion of sublimity, love and eroticism in the poems of this volume. Chapter V begins with a theoretical discussion surrounding the aesthetics of the beautiful in relation to Chapter II. It continues with H.D.'s understanding of beauty within her essays, in particular, "Responsibilities", "Notes on Thought and Vision" and "Notes on Euripides, Pausanius and Greek Lyric Poets". In the light of recent work on Pater's masculine model of Hellenic beauty, I discuss H.D.'s own configuration of beauty.
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Hieronimo in The Waste LandIrish, Bradley J. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (B.A.)--Boston University. University Professors Program Senior theses. / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / 2031-01-01
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E.E. Cummings : the ecology of his poetry / J.E. TerblancheTerblanche, Juan Etienne January 2002 (has links)
E.E. Cummings' modernist poetry roots itself in nature. That it has not received overt
ecosemiotic ("ecocritical") attention is surprising. This thesis reads Cummings' poetic
oeuvre as found in his Complete Poems (1994) with a view to its ecological (whole,
naturally interpenetrating) scope and dynamics.
It builds upon existing criticism of Cummings' natural view and nature poetry
(Norman Friedman). Although it mainly adheres to a close reading of the poems
themselves, it also makes use of secondary sources such as Cummings' prose, notes,
painting, and letters, in support of the ecological argument. It also draws from a broad
basis of sources including various strands of ecological discourse: especially
"ecocriticism" (William Howarth) as well as cultural ecology, deep ecology, and -- on
an interdisciplinary basis -- ecology proper (Michael Begon). The thesis incorporates
texts on modernist orientalism (Eric Hayot) since it argues that Cummings' ecology
and his unique version of Taoism radically inform one another. Because relatively few
sources exist that relate modernist poetry to nature (Robert Langbaum) the thesis
consults a variety of modernist criticisms (Jewel Spears Brooker) with a view to the
relations between the modernist sign and its outside natural context.
Drawing upon sources further a field (Umberto Eco) the thesis offers a theoretical
overview of the complication of natural context in the modem mindset as found in
mainstream modernist discourse, structuralism (A.J. Greimas), and post-structuralism
(Jacques Derrida). Amounting to a "semiotic fallacy", such a broad semiotic
complication of sign-nature relations accentuates the importance of Cummings'
poetry which remains at once modern and deeply connected to nature.
Against this broad background, and in exploration of a zone of between-ness --
between opposites such as culture versus nature and East versus West -- Cummings'
poetry is read hermeneutically to infer its various ecological dynamics. The main
questions that the thesis examines are: What is the scope of Cummings' poetic
ecology? What are its dynamics? How did critics respond to it? What reciprocal light
does it shed on the poetic ecologies of the mainstream modernist poets T.S. Eliot and
Ezra Pound?
The thesis demonstrates that the extent of Cummings' poetic ecology is considerable:
it involves his various poetic categories (such as lyricism, satire, and visual-verbal
poems) from early to late in his career, as well as a gradual Taoist crisis in his
development (more or less from the 1930s to the 1950s). A sequence of ecological
dynamics from Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching are applied to Cummings' poetry, including
humility (smallness and earthiness), flexibility (an osmotic semiosis), serendipity (or
synchronicity), a singular ideogrammatic style (Nina Hellerstein), iconicity (Michael
Webster), an open-ended cross-stitching of oppositional expectations, and "flow" or
signs that open out contextualizing possibilities faster than the reader can close them
down.
As the thesis further shows, these dynamics ultimately centre on Cummings' third
dimension or voice beyond static and entrenched opposites of the relational and
oppositional mind. The exploration concludes with a concise examination of
additional instances of the third voice such as a yin tendency (restoration of
femaleness), followed by an ecosemiotic analysis of two key ecological poems, the
leaf poem (“l(a”) and the hummingbird poem (“I/ never"). The latter acts as an
osmotic mandala that carries the modernist sign into active and complete earth, with
the reader acting as the creative and collaborating intermediary.
The focus then shifts to the critical reception of this poetic ecology, and finds that
influential critics (R.P. Blackmur) tended to misappropriate it as a form of non-intellectuality.
For example, Cummings' ecological flexibility was perceived as
childish sentimentality. The boundaries of Cummings' poetry were perceived not to
be "hardened" or "objective" enough. These receptions were based on a particular
mainstream modernist view of the intellect, informed by Eliot's objectified and
ambivalent early stance. Due to this, critics tended to overlook or dismiss that central
value of Cummings' poetry -- its ecology -- in favour of a more predominant and
dualistic alienation from and even cynicism towards natural integrity. These in-depth
revisitations reveal that Cummings' major minor status embodies an ecological
achievement: his poetry managed to move between and beyond the overall dualistic
mainstream modernist ecological dilemma that is marked by the major versus minor
categorization.
Based on this thorough exploration of the elusive ecological dynamism of Cummings'
poetry and its critical reception, the thesis turns its focus to Eliot's and Pound's
poetry. The early, major works such as The Waste Land (1922) are read from the
perspective of Cummings' poetic ecology, informed by the knowledge that a deep-seated
double-ness towards ecology would be expected in these major works. An
analysis of the mainstream modernist objectification of the sign with its concomitant
and sealed-off alienation from its outside context and nature follows - the focus is on
selected texts such as "Prufrock", "Tradition and the Individual Talent", and the
Cantos.
Eliot's and Pound's respective searches for and achievements of a third voice are
subsequently examined, as found (for example) in the DA sequence of The Waste
Land, 'The Idea of a Christian Society", the Four Quartets, Cathay, and the "Pisan
Cantos". Centring on this prevalent and underemphasized third voice, the thesis posits
an ecological reconfiguration of Cummings', Eliot's, and Pound's respective
modernist projects. It demonstrates that Cummings' poetic ecology is central to the
other two poets in terms of this voice. In provisional conclusion the thesis calls for a
critical shift towards a more intense engagement with "smaller" modernist poetries
such as Cummings', with a view to an increasing understanding of the ubiquitous,
complex, and sometimes complicating "green" layer of the modernist poetic
palimpsest. / Thesis (Ph.D. (English))--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003.
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E.E. Cummings : the ecology of his poetry / J.E. TerblancheTerblanche, Juan Etienne January 2002 (has links)
E.E. Cummings' modernist poetry roots itself in nature. That it has not received overt
ecosemiotic ("ecocritical") attention is surprising. This thesis reads Cummings' poetic
oeuvre as found in his Complete Poems (1994) with a view to its ecological (whole,
naturally interpenetrating) scope and dynamics.
It builds upon existing criticism of Cummings' natural view and nature poetry
(Norman Friedman). Although it mainly adheres to a close reading of the poems
themselves, it also makes use of secondary sources such as Cummings' prose, notes,
painting, and letters, in support of the ecological argument. It also draws from a broad
basis of sources including various strands of ecological discourse: especially
"ecocriticism" (William Howarth) as well as cultural ecology, deep ecology, and -- on
an interdisciplinary basis -- ecology proper (Michael Begon). The thesis incorporates
texts on modernist orientalism (Eric Hayot) since it argues that Cummings' ecology
and his unique version of Taoism radically inform one another. Because relatively few
sources exist that relate modernist poetry to nature (Robert Langbaum) the thesis
consults a variety of modernist criticisms (Jewel Spears Brooker) with a view to the
relations between the modernist sign and its outside natural context.
Drawing upon sources further a field (Umberto Eco) the thesis offers a theoretical
overview of the complication of natural context in the modem mindset as found in
mainstream modernist discourse, structuralism (A.J. Greimas), and post-structuralism
(Jacques Derrida). Amounting to a "semiotic fallacy", such a broad semiotic
complication of sign-nature relations accentuates the importance of Cummings'
poetry which remains at once modern and deeply connected to nature.
Against this broad background, and in exploration of a zone of between-ness --
between opposites such as culture versus nature and East versus West -- Cummings'
poetry is read hermeneutically to infer its various ecological dynamics. The main
questions that the thesis examines are: What is the scope of Cummings' poetic
ecology? What are its dynamics? How did critics respond to it? What reciprocal light
does it shed on the poetic ecologies of the mainstream modernist poets T.S. Eliot and
Ezra Pound?
The thesis demonstrates that the extent of Cummings' poetic ecology is considerable:
it involves his various poetic categories (such as lyricism, satire, and visual-verbal
poems) from early to late in his career, as well as a gradual Taoist crisis in his
development (more or less from the 1930s to the 1950s). A sequence of ecological
dynamics from Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching are applied to Cummings' poetry, including
humility (smallness and earthiness), flexibility (an osmotic semiosis), serendipity (or
synchronicity), a singular ideogrammatic style (Nina Hellerstein), iconicity (Michael
Webster), an open-ended cross-stitching of oppositional expectations, and "flow" or
signs that open out contextualizing possibilities faster than the reader can close them
down.
As the thesis further shows, these dynamics ultimately centre on Cummings' third
dimension or voice beyond static and entrenched opposites of the relational and
oppositional mind. The exploration concludes with a concise examination of
additional instances of the third voice such as a yin tendency (restoration of
femaleness), followed by an ecosemiotic analysis of two key ecological poems, the
leaf poem (“l(a”) and the hummingbird poem (“I/ never"). The latter acts as an
osmotic mandala that carries the modernist sign into active and complete earth, with
the reader acting as the creative and collaborating intermediary.
The focus then shifts to the critical reception of this poetic ecology, and finds that
influential critics (R.P. Blackmur) tended to misappropriate it as a form of non-intellectuality.
For example, Cummings' ecological flexibility was perceived as
childish sentimentality. The boundaries of Cummings' poetry were perceived not to
be "hardened" or "objective" enough. These receptions were based on a particular
mainstream modernist view of the intellect, informed by Eliot's objectified and
ambivalent early stance. Due to this, critics tended to overlook or dismiss that central
value of Cummings' poetry -- its ecology -- in favour of a more predominant and
dualistic alienation from and even cynicism towards natural integrity. These in-depth
revisitations reveal that Cummings' major minor status embodies an ecological
achievement: his poetry managed to move between and beyond the overall dualistic
mainstream modernist ecological dilemma that is marked by the major versus minor
categorization.
Based on this thorough exploration of the elusive ecological dynamism of Cummings'
poetry and its critical reception, the thesis turns its focus to Eliot's and Pound's
poetry. The early, major works such as The Waste Land (1922) are read from the
perspective of Cummings' poetic ecology, informed by the knowledge that a deep-seated
double-ness towards ecology would be expected in these major works. An
analysis of the mainstream modernist objectification of the sign with its concomitant
and sealed-off alienation from its outside context and nature follows - the focus is on
selected texts such as "Prufrock", "Tradition and the Individual Talent", and the
Cantos.
Eliot's and Pound's respective searches for and achievements of a third voice are
subsequently examined, as found (for example) in the DA sequence of The Waste
Land, 'The Idea of a Christian Society", the Four Quartets, Cathay, and the "Pisan
Cantos". Centring on this prevalent and underemphasized third voice, the thesis posits
an ecological reconfiguration of Cummings', Eliot's, and Pound's respective
modernist projects. It demonstrates that Cummings' poetic ecology is central to the
other two poets in terms of this voice. In provisional conclusion the thesis calls for a
critical shift towards a more intense engagement with "smaller" modernist poetries
such as Cummings', with a view to an increasing understanding of the ubiquitous,
complex, and sometimes complicating "green" layer of the modernist poetic
palimpsest. / Thesis (Ph.D. (English))--Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education, 2003.
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Discurso erótico em três poetas modernistas: Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade e João Cabral de Melo Neto / Erotic discourse in three modernist poets: Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade and Joao Cabral de Melo NetoLucena Junior, Jose Ferreira de 17 March 2009 (has links)
Esta dissertação versa sobre a análise do discurso da poesia erótica de Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade e João Cabral de Melo Neto. A pesquisa usa a teoria desenvolvida pela escola francesa de análise do discurso mais especificamente a Semântica Global, termo proposto por Dominique Maingueneau para a integração de sete planos básicos de um discurso. A semiótica, o estilo e o conceito de ethos discursivo ajudam a complementar esta pesquisa cujo objetivo é mostrar como o erotismo é visto por cada autor. / Esta dissertação versa sobre a análise do discurso da poesia erótica de Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade e João Cabral de Melo Neto. A pesquisa usa a teoria desenvolvida pela escola francesa de análise do discurso mais especificamente a Semântica Global, termo proposto por Dominique Maingueneau para a integração de sete planos básicos de um discurso. A semiótica, o estilo e o conceito de ethos discursivo ajudam a complementar esta pesquisa cujo objetivo é mostrar como o erotismo é visto por cada autor.
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Discurso erótico em três poetas modernistas: Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade e João Cabral de Melo Neto / Erotic discourse in three modernist poets: Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade and Joao Cabral de Melo NetoJose Ferreira de Lucena Junior 17 March 2009 (has links)
Esta dissertação versa sobre a análise do discurso da poesia erótica de Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade e João Cabral de Melo Neto. A pesquisa usa a teoria desenvolvida pela escola francesa de análise do discurso mais especificamente a Semântica Global, termo proposto por Dominique Maingueneau para a integração de sete planos básicos de um discurso. A semiótica, o estilo e o conceito de ethos discursivo ajudam a complementar esta pesquisa cujo objetivo é mostrar como o erotismo é visto por cada autor. / Esta dissertação versa sobre a análise do discurso da poesia erótica de Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade e João Cabral de Melo Neto. A pesquisa usa a teoria desenvolvida pela escola francesa de análise do discurso mais especificamente a Semântica Global, termo proposto por Dominique Maingueneau para a integração de sete planos básicos de um discurso. A semiótica, o estilo e o conceito de ethos discursivo ajudam a complementar esta pesquisa cujo objetivo é mostrar como o erotismo é visto por cada autor.
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A Bridge from Artificial Places: An Empirical Phenomenology of Mystical Reading in Rilke and EliotCampbell, Paul G Unknown Date
No description available.
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Basil Bunting's late modernism : from Pound to poetic communityNiven, Alex F. January 2013 (has links)
This study examines Basil Bunting's development as a poet from his meeting with Ezra Pound in Paris in 1923, through his collaborations with Pound, Louis Zukofsky, and other members of the Objectivist circle in the 1930s, up to his meeting with Allen Ginsberg and Tom Pickard in 1960s Britain against a backdrop of social activism and modernist revival. In particular, it seeks to query the critical commonplace that Bunting was a sceptic interested solely in the autotelic form of poetry, and to argue that his revival at the time of the long poem Briggflatts in the sixties should be read historically - as a case study that shows the Poundian tradition of praxis and orality acquiring a newly communitarian, leftist emphasis in the context of post-war Anglo-American poetry. The study draws extensively on unpublished manuscripts and letters held at the Basil Bunting Archive, Durham University, the Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas (Austin), and the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
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Fotografias verbais entre artes: Pau Brasil, Feuilles de Route e desenhos de Tarsila / Dialogue among artistic languages: Pau Brasil, Feuilles de Route and Tarsila´s drawingsCardoso, Ana Paula 04 June 2006 (has links)
A dissertação trata de Pau Brasil, de Oswald de Andrade, e Feuilles de Route: I. Le Formose e II. Sao-Paulo, de Blaise Cendrars, e pretende verificar como a cidade de São Paulo - em sua condição particular no contexto da modernidade brasileira - é transformada em matéria poética nessas obras. Em contraponto aos elementos do cosmopolitismo da metrópole, apresenta-se a vida rural no ambiente das fazendas do interior do Estado. Com base na análise das obras, procuro avaliar a poética dos autores em suas relações com a metrópole, considerando ainda temáticas associadas a outras questões da modernidade, como o progresso x a natureza e o tema da viagem. Na recomposição dos projetos poéticos dos autores nas obras estudadas, os desenhos elaborados por Tarsila do Amaral para ambas produções poéticas serão considerados como um ponto-chave. / This dissertation examines Oswald de Andrade´s Pau Brasil, and Blaise Cendrars´ Feuilles de Route: I. Le Formose and II. Sao-Paulo, and intents to verify how São Paulo has been - in its particular condition in the context of Brazilian modernity - transformed in poetic subject in these works. In contrast to the elements of metropolis´ cosmopolitism, presents the rural life in inner state farms. Based on work analysis, I attempt to evaluate the authors´ poetic in their relationship with the metropolis, considering also a subject matter associated to other modernity issues, like progress x nature and the travelling theme. In rearrangement of poetic projects from the authors in the studied works, the drawings created by Tarsila do Amaral for both poetic produtions are considered key-points.
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L'oracle en son jardin : William Carlos Williams et Allen Ginsberg / The oracle in the garden : William Carlos Williams & Allen GinsbergAublet, Anna 27 October 2018 (has links)
La tension analysée par Leo Marx dans son essai The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral ideal in America (1964), entre l’Arcadie américaine comme terre de pureté naturelle et le trope de la menace mécanique, sous-tend les œuvres des deux poètes du XXe siècle que nous nous proposons ici d’étudier, William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) et Allen Ginsberg (1926-1997). Leur abondante correspondance est la trace d’une relation poétique mais aussi filiale : Pater-Son, pour jouer sur le titre du long poème de Williams. Cet échange épistolaire vient également remettre en question la périodisation des mouvements littéraires trop souvent conçue comme une série de ruptures. L’état du New Jersey, Garden State, dont ils sont tous deux originaires, jardin dévasté par la révolution industrielle, apparaît comme un terrain fertile au surgissement d’une langue unique et autochtone. Cet espace commun et métamorphique offrira également une échappatoire à l’impasse de la classification des œuvres : du modernisme à la Beat Generation. Il faudra donc revenir sur les délinéaments des tracés cartographiques pour mieux dessiner à notre tour la carte poétique de leur relation littéraire et personnelle. Au gré des passions humaines, extases et tribulations, les poètes arpentent les sillons du vers qu’ils creusent à même le sol de leur New Jersey natal, pour faire sourdre le flot autochtone d’une poésie résolument américaine. / The tensions analyzed by Leo Marx in his 1964 essay The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the pastoral ideal in America, between the American Arcadia as a land of original purity and the trope of industrial threat is ghostly present throughout the works of both poets at stake in this dissertation: William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) and Allen Ginsberg (1926-1997). In this research I intend to analyze the processes by which the poets manage to claim ownership of their land in spite of the lurking mechanic apocalypse. Writing, each in his own time, both poets endeavor to reclaim the original historical and spatial meaning of their continent, by devising an autochthonous language that would provide a new “point of view” and a new “point of voice”, as means to prophesy a collective future for the nation from their personal “local” anchorage in their natal New Jersey. Striving to “make a start out of particulars” they intend to escape the vastness of the continent by focusing on the minute details surrounding them in their own garden state. The correspondence between the two poets also questions the periodization of literary movements, too often conceived as a series of breaks and schisms. The Garden State, metamorphic space covered with the remnants of industrialization provides us with a way to break free from the shackles of such categorization : from modernism to the Beat Generation.
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