Wordsworth's Second Nature: A Study of the Poetry and PoliticsWordsworth is England's greatest poet of the French Revolution: he witnessed some of its events first hand, participated in its intellectual and social ambitions, and eventually developed his celebrated poetic campaign in response to its enthusiasms. But how should that response be understood? Combining careful interpretive analysis with wide-ranging historical scholarship, Chandler presents a challenging new account of the political views implicit in Wordsworth's major works–in The Prelude, above all, but also in the central lyrics and shorter narrative poems. Central to the discussion, which restores Wordsworth to both the French and English contexts in which he matured, is a consideration of his relation to Rousseau and Burke. Chandler maintains that by the time Wordsworth set forth his "program for poetry" in 1798, he had turned away from the Rousseauist idea of nature that had informed his early republican writings. He had already become a poet of what Burke called "second nature"–human nature cultivated by custom, habit, and tradition–and an opponent of the quest for first principles that his friend Coleridge could not forsake. In his analysis of the poetry, Chandler suggests that even Wordsworth's most apparently private moments, the lyrical "spots of time," ideologically embodied the uncalculated habits of an oral narrative discipline and a native English mind. |
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Содержание
Beginning with Wordsworth | 3 |
A Poets Reflections on the Revolution in France | 31 |
The Uses of Second Nature | 62 |
Rousseau and the Politics of Education | 93 |
Natural Lore | 120 |
Traditionalism | 156 |
The Discipline of an English Poets Mind | 184 |
An Ideology against Ideology | 216 |
The Role of Coleridge | 235 |
Notes | 267 |
301 | |
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Wordsworth's Second Nature: A Study of the Poetry and Politics James Chandler Ограниченный просмотр - 1984 |
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Wordsworth's Historical Imagination: The Poetry of Displacement David Simpson Недоступно для просмотра - 1987 |