Para/worlds: Entanglements of Art and HistoryThe essays in this book engage in a broad range of topics, stretching from Anacreon and Horace to Kafka and Samuel Beckett, and they concern themselves with the notion of Art and Life as "para-worlds," or fields of being that elucidate and complete each other, answer and imply each other, confront and contradict each other: in short, with the "entanglements of Art and History." Pearce finds centrally that there is at present a crisis in literary criticism. On the one hand, there is a bustling and exciting crop of competing critical schools, each with its special mind-set, each tending to regard itself as the final hierophantic mode. On the other, it seems clear that criticism has recently become a part of higher pathology diagnosing and (if possible) eradicating, as Giles Gunn says, "the disease called literature." The result is that scholars and critics have become more and more self-conscious and obsessive about the purpose and methods of their work. The critical approaches that Pearce himself has employed in these essays are those of no one school or dogma but are almost as varied as the texts themselves, ranging from essays in classical scholarship, through new critical close readings, to postmodernist semiotic analysis. But whether traditional or innovative in method, each of these essays aims in the first instance to be what Anatole France once said all true criticism should be: "the adventure of the soul among masterpieces." |
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... in the present connection , “ If Mr. Keats does not forthwith cast off the uncleanness of this school , he will never make his way to the finest strain of poetry in which , taking him by himself , it appears he might succeed .
On the title page of Alfred Jarry's King Ubu appears the following curious epigraph in “ fraudulent archaic French " : Adonc le père Ubu hoscha la poire , dont fut depuis nominé par les Anglois Shakespeare , et vous avez de lui sous ce ...
The poem first appears in a letter ( Mar. 2 , 1892 ) written by Yeats to Katharine Tynan ( to whom , a little earlier , he had considered proposing marriage ) as an example of “ my recent attempts at love poetry .
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Contents
On the Autumn Ode of Keats | 9 |
Keats and Lamia | 23 |
Ghostly Paradigms of Things | 43 |
Copyright | |
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