Sincerity's Shadow: Self-Consciousness in British Romantic and Mid-Twentieth-Century American Poetry

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Harvard University Press, 30.06.2009 - 256 Seiten

In a work of surprising range and authority, Deborah Forbes refocuses critical discussion of both Romantic and modern poetry. Sincerity's Shadow is a versatile conceptual toolkit for reading poetry.

Ever since Wordsworth redefined poetry as "the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings," poets in English have sought to represent a "sincere" self-consciousness through their work. Forbes's generative insight is that this project can only succeed by staging its own failures. Self-representation never achieves final sincerity, but rather produces an array of "sincerity effects" that give form to poetry's exploration of self. In essays comparing poets as seemingly different in context and temperament as Wordsworth and Adrienne Rich, Lord Byron and Anne Sexton, John Keats and Elizabeth Bishop, Forbes reveals unexpected convergences of poetic strategy. A lively and convincing dialectic is sustained through detailed readings of individual poems. By preserving the possible claims of sincerity longer than postmodern criticism has tended to, while understanding sincerity in the strictest sense possible, Forbes establishes a new vantage on the purposes of poetry.



Table of Contents:

Introduction

1. The Personal Universal
Sincerity as Integrity in the Poetry of Wordsworth and Rich
2. Before and After
Sincerity as Form in the Poetry of Wordsworth, Lowell, Rich, and Plath
3. Sincerity and the Staged Confession
The Monologues of Browning, Eliot, Berryman, and Plath
4. The Drama of Breakdown and the Breakdown of Drama
The Charismatic Poetry of Byron and Sexton
5. Agnostic Sincerity
The Poet as Observer in the Work of Keats, Bishop, and Merrill

Conclusion
Notes
Index



From the Conclusion

"In spite of modern experiments in communal authorship, writing poetry remains one of the most individual of acts, and yet, because it provides the ground upon which the paradoxes of self-consciousness can move most freely, one of the acts most skeptical about the authority of any individual claim to self-understanding. . . . In undertaking its experiments, poetry may separate itself from certain contexts (economic, political, historical), but is itself as local and concrete as these contexts, an experience as well as a meditation on our experiences. In its particularity, its flexibility, its sensual and sonic complexity, its consideration of the extra-rational experiences of pleasure and desire, and above all in the ways in which it speaks with both more and less authority, more and less presence than an actual human voice, poetry offers us the experience of the unknown at the core of proposed self-knowledge. This is lyric poetry's enduring -- though not sole -- claim on us."

 

Inhalt

Introduction
1
Sincerity as Integrity in the Poetry of Wordsworth and Rich
14
Sincerity as Form in the Poetry of Wordsworth Lowell Rich and Plath
47
The Monologues of Browning Eliot Berryman and Plath
82
The Charismatic Poetry of Byron and Sexton
116
The Poet as Observer in the Work of Keats Bishop and Merrill
151
Conclusion
190
Notes
197
Index
241
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