Resemblance and Disgrace: Alexander Pope and the Deformation of Culture

Resemblance and Disgrace: Alexander Pope and the Deformation of Culture

by Helen Deutsch
Resemblance and Disgrace: Alexander Pope and the Deformation of Culture

Resemblance and Disgrace: Alexander Pope and the Deformation of Culture

by Helen Deutsch

Hardcover(Reprint 2014)

$65.00 
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Overview

Like the miniatures of which Pope was so fond, the book is at once particular in its focus and wide-ranging in its conceptual scope. While drawing on recent feminist, historicist, and materialist criticism of Pope, as well as current theoretical work on the body, it also attends closely to the local ambiguities of the poet's texts and cultural milieu, details often lost to critical view. The result is a revitalized—and broadened—reading of Pope, and of our understanding of the processes of authorship. By focusing on the process by which ideas of authority and authenticity took shape at specific moments in Pope's career, Resemblance and Disgrace calls into question distinctions between theoretical abstractions and material details, between literary originality and critical derivation, following Pope's own example of rewriting intellectual boundaries as creative opportunities.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674419162
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 02/05/1996
Edition description: Reprint 2014
Pages: 286
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.06(h) x (d)

About the Author

Deutsch Helen :

Helen Deutsch is Assistant Professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. The "Truest Copies" of a "Mean Original"

2. The Rape of the Lock as Miniature Epic

3. Twickenham and the Landscape of True Character

4. Horace and the Art of Self-Collection

5. Disfigured Truth and the Proper Name

Abbreviations

Notes

Index

What People are Saying About This

Susan Staves

Deutsch is a young critic of unusual intelligence. She takes excellent advantage of both the fact of Pope's physical deformity and his own self-conscious deployment of it to explore issues of the relation of body to self that are also of wide current interest. She considers how Pope collects fragments of the cultural past, then proceeds to stamp them with his own personal, individual, disfigured image in order to declare his ownership of them. Her overall project is coherent and unified, her writing often stylish, and one has the sense that the various facts of the jewel of Pope's identity are being lovingly rotated before one's eyes.
Susan Staves, Brandeis University

Deutsch is a young critic of unusual intelligence. She takes excellent advantage of both the fact of Pope's physical deformity and his own self-conscious deployment of it to explore issues of the relation of body to self that are also of wide current interest. She considers how Pope collects fragments of the cultural past, then proceeds to stamp them with his own personal, individual, disfigured image in order to declare his ownership of them. Her overall project is coherent and unified, her writing often stylish, and one has the sense that the various facts of the jewel of Pope's identity are being lovingly rotated before one's eyes.

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