Results for 'Ezra Pound, McShane, Cantowers'

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  1.  27
    Climbing the Cantowers.Tom McCallion - 2003 - Journal of Macrodynamic Analysis 3:273-286.
    In his seventieth year, paralleling Ezra Pound’s life work of 117 Cantos, Phil McShane began a long project of writing 117 essays, a new one to be published on the Web on the first day of every month. So far he has kept successfully to this gruelling schedule. He calls these essays ‘Cantowers’, the name involving a multi-levelled pun, partly on the word ‘canto’ itself, but also hinting at the notion that persons ‘can tower’ above the partial and (...)
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  2.  16
    10. Guido's Relations.Ezra Pound - 2012 - In John Biguenet & Rainer Schulte (eds.), Theories of Translation: An Anthology of Essays From Dryden to Derrida. University of Chicago Press. pp. 83-92.
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  3.  19
    Confucius: The Great Digest and Unwobbling Pivot.Ezra Pound - 1954 - Philosophy East and West 3 (4):371-373.
  4.  18
    The Confucian Odes, the Classic Anthology Defined by Confucius.Chauncey S. Goodrich & Ezra Pound - 1972 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 92 (4):587.
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  5.  61
    The Classic Noh Theatre of Japan.R. M., Ezra Pound & Ernest Fenollosa - 1960 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 80 (2):189.
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  6.  23
    Ezra Pound: "Insanity," "Treason," and Care.William M. Chace - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 14 (1):134-141.
    The British journalist Christopher Hitchens has recently noted that the extraordinary excitement created by l’affaire Pound, an excitement sustained for now some forty years, is partly the result of having no fewer than three debates going on whenever the poet’s legal situation and his consequent hospitalization are discussed. As Hitchens says, those questions are: “First, was Pound guilty of treason? If not, or even if so, was he mad? Third, was he given privileged treatment for either condition?”1 I propose to (...)
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  7. Ezra pound's confucianism.Chungeng Zhu - 2005 - Philosophy and Literature 29 (1):57-72.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Ezra Pound's ConfucianismChungeng ZhuTo T. S. Eliot's question "What does Mr. Pound believe?" Pound's answer is explicit and categorical: "I believe the Ta Hio" (Da Xue). Confucianism, Pound believes, offers a solution to the West that, from its political institutions to its economic system, has fallen into chaos and disorder. Ideology and aesthetics are inextricable. Pound also sees in Confucianism a way of making poetry in articulating his (...)
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  8. Ezra Pound: musical rehearsals and Confucian harmony.Enrique Martinez - 1996 - Critical Review (University of Melbourne) 36:19.
    But the modelling of the Confucian gentleman or junzi type of human being under the music simile and the rules of propriety (li) 禮 needs to be brought within the perspective of the Confucian use of language and the ultimately harmonising role of this philosophy. Such considerations lead us back to a concept that Pound was always keen to produce in his expositions, and refers directly to the importance of precise language usage. Pound's first concern for 'le mot juste' and (...)
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  9. Ezra Pound. Ein Forschungsbericht.'.Franz Link - 1984 - Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft Und Geistesgeschichte 58 (3):497-523.
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  10.  12
    Ezra Pound as Literary Critic.Emeritus Professor K. K. Ruthven & K. K. Ruthven - 1990 - Routledge.
    Bringing some of the insights of modern critical theory to bear on a great deal of information about Pound's activities as a literary critic, K.K. Ruthven provides a provocative re-reading of a major modernist writer who dominated the discourse of modernism.
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  11.  18
    Ezra Pound and Italian fascism.Stephen Fredman - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (5):818-819.
  12.  22
    Ezra Pound, Rene Thom, and the Experience of Poetry.Strother B. Purdy - 1984 - Substance 13 (2):39.
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  13.  15
    Ezra Pound: Poet: Volume II: The Epic Years, 1921 – 1939.William M. Chace - 2015 - Common Knowledge 21 (3):517-519.
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  14.  51
    The "Cantos" of Ezra Pound, the Truth in Contradiction.Jerome J. McGann - 1988 - Critical Inquiry 15 (1):1-25.
    … [T]he scandals surrounding the work of these men are as nothing compared to the scandal of Ezra Pound’s Cantos. We are amused to think that anyone ever felt Byron might have been mad, bad, and dangerous to know. We are not amused by the Cantos. Like Pound’s letters and so much of his prose, the Cantos is difficult to like or enjoy. It is a paradigm of poetic obscurity because its often cryptic style is married to materials which (...)
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  15.  19
    Poetry and Politics: Ezra Pound, Poetry Awards, and the Liberal Defense of Lyricism.A. S. Gross - 2015 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2015 (170):168-189.
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  16.  12
    Horace, Strabo, and Ezra Pound: The Lie of the Final Poem.Robert Solomon & Rosemary Nielsen - 1994 - Revue Belge de Philologie Et D’Histoire 72 (1):62-77.
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  17.  10
    Posthumous Cantos by Ezra Pound.William M. Chace - 2018 - Common Knowledge 24 (1):165-166.
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  18.  27
    Eric Voegelin, Ezra Pound and the Balance of Consciousness.Glenn Hughes - 1997 - Modern Schoolman 75 (1):1-21.
  19.  45
    Image, Word, and Sign: The Visual Arts as Evidence in Ezra Pound's "Cantos".Michael André Bernstein - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (2):347-364.
    1. To list Pound’s triumphs of recognition in the realm of art, music, or literature is by itself no more enlightening than to catalog his oversights. Thus, for example, his instant and almost uncanny responsiveness to the work of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska is not more informative than his bizarre ranking of Francis Picabia’s paintings above those of Picasso or Matisse. Clearly it is essential to know, with as much specificity as possible, exactly what Pound said about a particular work of art (...)
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  20.  13
    From Vortex to Vorticism: Ezra Pound’s Art and Science.Antje Pfannkuchen - 2005 - Intertexts 9 (1):61-76.
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  21.  50
    The Poetry of Ezra Pound. By Hugh Kenner. [REVIEW]H. Marshall McLuhan - 1952 - Renascence 4 (2):215-217.
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  22.  42
    "Mere Words": The Trial of Ezra Pound.Conrad L. Rushing - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 14 (1):111-133.
    The charge of treason and the judgment of insanity have left questions that invariably intrude on an assessment of Pound’s life and work. Critics frequently adopt a strategy of separating the life and the work, but tactical review is often necessary. There is a lightness in Pound’s writing that speaks of a being detached from the concerns of the world. Yet with his economic theory of social credit, his political and racial views, as well as his concern for other writers, (...)
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  23. The Metamorphic Tradition in Modern Poetry: Essays on the Work of Ezra Pound, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, T. S. Eliot, Hart Crane, Randall Jarrell, and William Butler Yeats.SISTER M. BERNETTA QUINN - 1955
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  24.  16
    Von der Gabe des Gedichts zur Vergebung für den Dichter? Der Sagetrieb Ezra Pounds.Jean-Michel Rabaté - 1993 - In Michael Wetzel & Jean-Michel Rabaté (eds.), Ethik der Gabe: Denken Nach Jacques Derrida. De Gruyter. pp. 81-90.
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  25.  27
    New Approaches to Ezra PoundA Guide to Ezra Pound's Personae (1926)Ezra Pound: The Image and the RealThe Poetry of Ezra Pound: Forms and Renewals, 1908-1920.Merle E. Brown, Eva Hesse, K. K. Ruthven, Herbert N. Schneidau & Hugh Witemeyer - 1971 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 29 (3):412.
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  26.  25
    Phantom Transmissions: The Radio Broadcasts of Ezra Pound.Daniel Tiffany - 1990 - Substance 19 (1):53.
  27.  36
    An Umbrian Ezra Pound? Giuliano Bonazzi: Propertius Resartus. Elegiarum libri a diuturna interpolatione redempti. Pp. xx+369. Rome: Bretschneider, 1951. Paper. [REVIEW]W. R. Smyth - 1953 - The Classical Review 3 (2):101-102.
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  28.  15
    "To act on one's definition": Ezra Pound, Carl Schmitt, and the Poetics of Sovereignty.Emily Rich - 2016 - Intertexts 20 (2):135-153.
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  29.  62
    The purification of poetry: A note on the poetics of Ezra pound's ‘cantos’.K. T. S. Campbell - 1968 - British Journal of Aesthetics 8 (2):124-137.
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  30. The Passions Observed: The Visionary Poetics of Ezra Pound.Sanford Schwartz - 1990 - Analecta Husserliana 28:627.
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  31. "Critic as Scientist: The modernist poetics of Ezra Pound": Ian F. A. Bell. [REVIEW]Olga Mcdonald Meidner - 1982 - British Journal of Aesthetics 22 (3):285.
     
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  32.  31
    In Pound We Trust: The Economy of Poetry/The Poetry of Economics.Richard Sieburth - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 14 (1):142-172.
    … Pound’s Imagist economy often mixes metaphors of capitalization with metaphors of expenditure. Words, he writes in an early essay, are like cones filled with energy, laden with the accumulated “power of tradition.” When correctly juxtaposed, these words “radiate” or “discharge” or spend this energy , just as the Image releases “an intellectual and emotional complex in an instant of time” . The precise relation of accumulation to expenditure in Pound’s Imagism is never really elaborated. For clarification one would probably (...)
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  33.  19
    "Can't move 'em with a cold thing like economics": On Pound's Cantos 18 and 19.Dongho Cha - 2020 - Philosophy and Literature 44 (2):486-491.
    Ezra Pound's Canto 18 begins with Kublai Khan, the first emperor of the Yuan Dynasty, who undertook and indeed had the power to complete the coining of money, that is, the establishment of a new currency system.1 Despite the use of the word "coin," the reason that Pound pays attention to such a historical figure as Kublai is that he was among the first to issue "paper" money; "They take bast of the mulberry-tree, / That is a skin between (...)
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  34. “It doesn’t... matter where you begin”: Pound and Santayana on Education.Martin Coleman - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 44 (4):1-17.
    American poet Ezra Pound wrote a letter on February 6, 1940, inviting American philosopher George Santayana to join poet T. S. Eliot and himself in writing “a volume . . . on the Ideal University, or The Proper Curriculum, or how it would be possible to educate and/or (mostly or) civilize the university student.” Santayana declined the invitation and claimed to have no ideas on the subject of education. Participation would have been morally impossible, he wrote, because unlike Pound (...)
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  35.  12
    The Matrix of Modernism: Pound, Eliot, and Early Twentieth-century Thought.Sanford Schwartz - 1985 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    Sanford Schwartz situates Modernist poetics in the intellectual ferment of the early twentieth century, which witnessed major developments in philosophy, science, and the arts. Beginning with the works of various philosophers--Bergson, James, Bradley, Nietzsche, and Husserl, among others--he establishes a matrix that brings together not only the principal characteristics of Modernist/New Critical poetics but also the affiliations between the Continental and the Anglo-American critical traditions. Originally published in 1988. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make (...)
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  36.  96
    The modernist cult of ugliness: aesthetic and gender politics.Lesley Higgins - 2002 - New York: Palgrave.
    "Cult of ugliness," Ezra Pound’s phrase, powerfully summarizes the ways in which modernists such as Pound, T. S. Eliot, Wyndham Lewis, and T. E. Hulme—the self-styled "Men of 1914"—responded to the "horrid or sordid or disgusting" conditions of modernity by radically changing aesthetic theory and literary practice. Only the representation of "ugliness," they protested, would produce the new, truly "beautiful" work of art. They dissociated the beautiful from its traditional embodiment in female beauty, and from its association with Walter (...)
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  37.  13
    Angels, Guests and Sadists: On-Screen Poetry in the Cinema of Pier Paolo Pasolini.Thomas Allen - 2023 - Film-Philosophy 27 (3):377-400.
    This article considers how poetry features in Pasolini’s cinema. It argues that the manner in which Pasolini films poetry provides insight into his theory of an affinity between poetry and film, and into more general judgements concerning social reality. The article begins with an analysis of the final sequence of Salò (1975) where I argue that Ezra Pound’s poetry provides a soundtrack for the spectacle of torture in which the film’s libertines engage. Following this, I consider Pasolini’s 1965 text (...)
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  38.  33
    Of Mice and Men Gaze at Evil.Amir Abbas Moslemi - 2018 - International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences 80:22-28.
    Publication date: 31 January 2018 Source: Author: Amir Abbas Moslemi Ezra Pound’s Shi-Shu: Rats is read Foucauldianly to instantiate an interaction between Confucianism and Western schools of thought in response to the problem of evil. There is a review of Leibniz’s theodicy to clear up confusion, and also to pave the way for a succession of readings of a number of philosophers like Hume and James — foregrounding epistemic inclination of poets like Pope, Wordsworth and Burns. ‘Accidentality’ and ‘essentiality’ (...)
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  39.  21
    The Work of Difference: Modernism, Romanticism, and the Production of Literary Form by Audrey Wasser.Matthew Scully - 2019 - Substance 48 (1):113-117.
    "The problem of art in the modern era," according to the opening of Audrey Wasser's The Work of Difference: Modernism, Romanticism, and the Production of Literary Form, "is the problem of the new". Citing the familiar maxim of Ezra Pound, "make it new," Wasser locates in the problem of novelty the problem of modern art as such. Modernity inherits its fixation on the new from a longer tradition, which for Wasser begins with the German romantics in the wake of (...)
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  40.  18
    The Matter of Capital, Christopher Nealon, Cambridge, MA.: Harvard University Press, 2011; The Zukofsky Era: Modernity, Margins, and the Avant-Garde, Ruth Jennison, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012.Alex Niven - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (3):205-212.
    InThe Matter of Capital, Christopher Nealon offers a distinctive revisionary account of American poetry written in the wake of the ideological retreats of Ezra Pound and W.H. Auden around the time of the Second World War. Nealon argues that American verse of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries was profoundly influenced by an unfolding context of capitalist development and crisis, in ways that have not been fully accounted for in orthodox accounts of recent literary history. Ruth Jennison’sThe Zukofsky (...)
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  41.  23
    (1 other version)English emergencies and Russian rescues, C. 1875 – 2000.Noa Halevy - 2017 - Common Knowledge 23 (3):404-439.
    This second installment in a chronologically arranged, three-part sequence continues the author's examination of Anglo-American literati who, in the later nineteenth and twentieth centuries, turned — in acts of combined xenophilia and xenophobia — to Russian literature and literary theory in order to escape the dominant influence of avant-garde movements in France. These Anglophone writers found in Russian exemplars a responsible, morally rigorous, and pragmatic, yet philosophically sophisticated, alternative to what they described as the amoral, superficial, and pretentious aestheticism of (...)
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  42.  30
    "These Children That Come at You with Knives": "Ressentiment", Mass Culture, and the Saturnalia.Michael André Bernstein - 1991 - Critical Inquiry 17 (2):358-385.
    In what is probably the most arresting of all the textual developments of the Saturnalian dialogues, the reader’s emotional identification with the voice of rage and thwarted rebellion is ever more thoroughly compelled by the structure and tone of succeeding works, at the same time that the dangers of that role, both for its bearer and for others, are ever more explicitly argued. Readers of Le Neveau de Rameau are not forced by the inner logic of the text to choose (...)
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  43. Political Poetry: A Few Notes. Poetics for N30.Jeroen Mettes - 2012 - Continent 2 (1):29-35.
    continent. 2.1 (2012): 29–35. Translated by Vincent W.J. van Gerven Oei from Jeroen Mettes. "Politieke Poëzie: Enige aantekeningen, Poëtica bij N30 (versie 2006)." In Weerstandbeleid: Nieuwe kritiek . Amsterdam: De wereldbibliotheek, 2011. Published with permission of Uitgeverij Wereldbibliotheek, Amsterdam. L’égalité veut d’autres lois . —Eugène Pottier The modern poem does not have form but consistency (that is sensed), no content but a problem (that is developed). Consistency + problem = composition. The problem of modern poetry is capitalism. Capitalism—which has no (...)
     
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  44.  32
    Values in Language; Or, Where Have "Goodness, Truth," and "Beauty" Gone?Josephine Miles - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 3 (1):1-13.
    As you might guess, the words goodness, truth, and beauty are not of heavy poetic value today. Terms of concept may be stressed again someday, and maybe soon, but at the moment have gone out of poetry in favor of more concreteness, more imagery, more connotative suggestion, less effect of the naming and labeling virtues, which Ezra Pound and other twentieth-century leaders have told us not to use. But actually these terms of abstract concept were lessened in major usage (...)
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  45.  15
    Siegeslieder: Griechisch - Deutsch.H. G. Pindar - 2011 - De Gruyter.
    Pindar, geboren 522/518 v. Chr. bei Theben, hat Chorlyrik überwiegend religiösen Inhalts geschrieben: Hymnen, Paiane und Dithyramben, aber auch Mädchenlieder, Tanzlieder und Trauergesänge. Vollständig erhalten geblieben sind die vier Bücher Siegeslieder, die den strengen Stil mythischer Dichtung mit der Sprache der sportlichen Wettkämpfe verbinden. Mit dieser Verschränkung von aktuellem Anlass, mythischem Hintergrund, überlieferter Lebensweisheit und poetologischer Reflexion werden Spannungsbögen entworfen, die in der antiken wie in der modernen Lyrik einzigartig sind. Bereits in hellenistischer Zeit galt Pindar als der Lyriker schlechthin. (...)
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  46.  63
    Critical Fanonism. Gates - 1991 - Critical Inquiry 17 (3):457-470.
    One of the signal developments in contemporary criticism over the past several years has been the ascendancy of the colonial paradigm. In conjunction with this new turn, Frantz Fanon has now been reinstated as a global theorist, and not simply by those engaged in Third World or subaltern studies. In a recent collection centered on British romanticism, Jerome McGann opens a discussion of William Blake and Ezra Pound with an extended invocation of Fanon. Donald Pease has used Fanon to (...)
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  47.  31
    Contrary Impulses: The Tension between Poetry and Theory.John Koethe - 1991 - Critical Inquiry 18 (1):64-75.
    A striking fact of our current literary culture is the estrangement between poets and critics and reviewers of contemporary poetry on the one hand, and proponents of that loosely defined set of doctrines, methodologies, and interests that goes by the name of “theory” on the other. There are individual exceptions to this on both sides, and one can find counterexamples to every generalization I shall suggest here. Nevertheless, anyone familiar with the climates of opinion to be found in English and (...)
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  48.  52
    The "Tao" and the "Logos": Notes on Derrida's Critique of Logocentrism.Zhang Longxi - 1985 - Critical Inquiry 11 (3):385-398.
    In a wholesale destructive or deconstructive critique of Western philosophical tradition, it is precisely this ethnocentric-phonocentric view of language that Jacques Derrida has chosen for his target. In Derrida’s critique, Hegel appears as one of the powerful enactors of that tradition yet peculiarly on the verge of turning away from it as “the last philosopher of the book and the first thinker of writing.”13 As Derrida sees it, phonocentrism in its philosophical dimension is also “logocentrism: the metaphysics of phonetic writing” (...)
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  49. Spatial Form in Literature: Toward a General Theory.W. J. T. Mitchell - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 6 (3):539-567.
    Although the notion of spatiality has always lurked in the background of discussions of literary form, the self-conscious use of the term as a critical concept is generally traced to Joseph Frank's seminal essay of 1945, "Spatial Form in Modern Literature."1 Frank's basic argument is that modernist literary works are "spatial" insofar as they replace history and narrative sequence with a sense of mythic simultaneity and disrupt the normal continuities of English prose with disjunctive syntactic arrangements. This argument has been (...)
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  50.  25
    "O Totiens Servus": Saturnalia and Servitude in Augustan Rome.Michael André Bernstein - 1987 - Critical Inquiry 13 (3):450-474.
    To pose the question of evaluating political poetry is, of course, itself already a polemical move, since it insists on distinctions that command neither general critical consent nor methodological specificity. Repudiating the pertinence of such concerns to poetry has been, after all, the principal thrust of some of the most influential texts in modern literary theory. Indeed, considered historically, the struggle to separate aesthetic from both moral and political considerations can be seen as constituting the inaugural, grounding act of poetics (...)
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