The Unremarkable WordsworthU of Minnesota Press, 1987 - 247 sider |
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Side vii
... perhaps the last mo- ment at which a reputation in literary study could be made solely by commentary on a single canonical poet . Hartman's essays on Wordsworth written in the in- tervening quarter century and gathered here are once ...
... perhaps the last mo- ment at which a reputation in literary study could be made solely by commentary on a single canonical poet . Hartman's essays on Wordsworth written in the in- tervening quarter century and gathered here are once ...
Side ix
... perhaps even " English " Heidegger's strange German . What characterizes Hartman's " method " —though it cannot really be called that is that when he takes up his major concerns , like time in " Timely Utterance " or " the subject " in ...
... perhaps even " English " Heidegger's strange German . What characterizes Hartman's " method " —though it cannot really be called that is that when he takes up his major concerns , like time in " Timely Utterance " or " the subject " in ...
Side x
... ecclesiastical and institutional presuppositions ( as in Kierkegaard ) , it makes clear its maieutic or propaedeutic position . Derrida has not said what deconstruction in his view leads to . De Man is perhaps × FOREWORD.
... ecclesiastical and institutional presuppositions ( as in Kierkegaard ) , it makes clear its maieutic or propaedeutic position . Derrida has not said what deconstruction in his view leads to . De Man is perhaps × FOREWORD.
Side xi
Geoffrey H. Hartman. in his view leads to . De Man is perhaps even more austere . It is true that we might speculate that for him deconstruction unsettles every possibility of fixing a legitimated claim in language , a claim that could ...
Geoffrey H. Hartman. in his view leads to . De Man is perhaps even more austere . It is true that we might speculate that for him deconstruction unsettles every possibility of fixing a legitimated claim in language , a claim that could ...
Side xii
... ( perhaps the mother , perhaps whatever lies behind all sense of being " mothered " ) . In tension with this experience , Wordsworth does not so much describe as forge — in every sense — the development of his own mind . This is ...
... ( perhaps the mother , perhaps whatever lies behind all sense of being " mothered " ) . In tension with this experience , Wordsworth does not so much describe as forge — in every sense — the development of his own mind . This is ...
Indhold
1 Wordsworth Revisited | 3 |
2 A Touching Compulsion | 18 |
3 Inscriptions and Romantic Nature Poetry | 31 |
4 False Themes and Gentle Minds | 47 |
5 Wordsworth and Goethe in Literary History | 58 |
6 Blessing the Torrent | 75 |
7 Words Wish Worth | 90 |
8 Diction and Defense | 120 |
10 Timely Utterance Once More | 152 |
11 The Poetics of Prophecy | 163 |
12 Elation in Hegel and Wordsworth | 182 |
13 Wordsworth before Heidegger | 194 |
14 The Unremarkable Poet | 207 |
Notes | 223 |
Index | 241 |
9 The Use and Abuse of Structural Analysis | 129 |
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
abyss apocalyptic become beginning Blake blessing blind called child Classical Coleridge Coleridge's consciousness curse Danish Boy darkness death Devil's Bridge diction divine Dorothy Wordsworth echoes elation English epigram epitaph evokes experience eyes feeling fiat genius loci ghostly Goethe Goethe's Grasmere Greek Anthology Hartman haunted Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's human imagination inscription interpretation Intimations Ode Jacques Lacan kind language light literary Lyrical Ballads meaning metaphor Milton mind mode myth nature passion perhaps personification phrase poem poet poet's poetic Prelude prophetic psychoanalysis question reader reading relation rhetoric Riffaterre River Duddon Romance sacred scripture secular seems sense silence Simplon Pass Snowdon sonnet sound speak speech spirit stanza strange structure style sublime suggests temporal theme Theocritus things thou thought Tintern Abbey tion touch tradition tree utterance verse Viamala vision visionary voice William Wordsworth wish words Wordsworth writes Yew-Trees yews