After the Heavenly Tune: English Poetry and the Aspiration to Song

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Duquesne University Press, 2000 - 418 páginas
After the Heavenly Tune offers an expansive answer to the basic question central to the history of poetry and poetics: what do poets mean when they write "I sing?" Berley's chapters on Shakespeare and Milton unfold the remarkable development of these two "speculative musical poetics" who are central to the history of English poetry. And in his last two chapters on romanticism and modernism, he draws an intriguing line from Wordsworth to Stevens, in which the aspiration to song becomes a dazzling means of exploring, scrutinizing, and redefining the burdens and achievements--poetic, philosophical, social, and personal--for individual poets in their times. After the Heavenly Tune offers not only groundbreaking studies of The Merchant of Venice and Milton's theory of prophecy, but also compelling new readings of classical and medieval literary theory, the burdens of romanticism, and the resolutions of modernism. This work will appeal to a broad audience: Renaissance, classical, and romantic literary scholars; philosophers; musicologists; theologians; and general readers interested in English poetry and Literary Studies.

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Conteúdo

ONE Platos True Musician and the Trope
27
Beyond Aristotelian Praxis
36
Platonic SelfRule and Neoplatonic Frenzy
45
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Sobre o autor (2000)

Marc Berley is adjunct associate professor of English at Barnard College, Columbia University, and president of the Foundation for Academic Standards & Tradition. He is the author of After the Heavenly Tune : English Poetry and the Aspiration to Song.

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