"Fallen from the Symboled World": Precedents for the New Formalism

by Wyatt Prunty

"Fallen from the Symboled World": Precedents for the New Formalism

by Wyatt Prunty

eBook

$26.99  $35.99 Save 25% Current price is $26.99, Original price is $35.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

This study evaluates figure and form in contemporary poetry, especially the powers of simile and simile-like structures. Examining the works of Nemerov, Wilbur, Bowers, Hecht, Justice, Cunningham, Bishop, Van Duyn, Hollander, Pack, Kennedy, Ammons, Creeley, and Wright, Prunty argues that doubts about language, the tradition, and theistic assumptions embedded in the tradition have made simile and various simile-like arrangements into major modes of thought. From Lowell's early interest in the "similitudo" and the "phantasm" of Gilson, to Husserl's "phantasies" and Heidegger's interest in similitude, to the use made by contemporary poets of simile, he shows that metaphor--together with slippage, mimicry, synaphea, conjunctions, anacoluthon, chiasmus, and other simile-like patternings--have proven to be more trustworthy than symbol and allegory. Throughout the study, Prunty demonstrates that as uncertainty about language has changed from a predicament of mind to a new way of thinking, simile and simile-like occurrences have provided poetry with variational thought and constitutive power.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195363340
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 02/22/1990
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 364 KB

About the Author

Johns Hopkins University

Table of Contents

Introduction3
1Symbol, Allegory, Causality, and the Phenomenal Flux23
2Emaciated Poetry and the Imaginative Diet57
3Poems That Speak, Poems That Sing89
4Howard Nemerov: Mimicry and Other Tropes143
5Patterns of Similitude in the Poetry of Justice, Hecht, Van Duyn, Bishop, Wilbur, Hollander, Pack, and Pinsky193
Conclusion293
Notes301
Index311
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews