Poetry as PersuasionUniversity of Georgia Press, 2001 - 201 páginas Focusing on the relation of the poet to the reader, Carl Dennis proposes that poems are acts of persuasion and that the strength of a poem's speaker is the key to winning the reader's sympathetic attention. Dennis identifies the qualities of passion, discrimination, and inclusiveness as essential in creating a compelling speaker. This emphasis on character leads to fresh discussions of point of view, irony, myth, and genre. Each subject is developed through careful readings of a wide variety of poets--from Whitman and Dickinson to contemporaries. Lucidly written, Poetry as Persuasion offers both inspiration and important advice for practicing poets, and at the same time provides anyone with an interest in poetry a fresh understanding of its appeal. |
Conteúdo
ONE The Voice of Authority | 15 |
Two Point of View | 42 |
FIVE Midcourse Corrections | 116 |
SEVEN Poetry as Liberation | 171 |
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Termos e frases comuns
Adam Zagajewski Alfred Corning Clark Allende Allende's Allende's death America assertion audience believe Bjorn Borg CARL DENNIS chapter claims clear contemporary convincing critical culture death define Dickinson's distance dramatic embodied Emerson Emily Dickinson emphatic enacted engagement example expression fact feel first-person poems Frederick Goddard Tuckerman genre give grammatical person heroic human ideal imagination implied included involves irony kind of poem language lines look Lopate's lovers Lowell's M. H. Abrams meaning Mending Wall metaphor Miguel mocking Moloch moral move myth mythic nature notion particular person perspective Poems New York poet poet's poetic poetry political present problem Prufrock reader resist rhetorical Romantic satire savage armed seems sense shift skeptical sounding speaker speech speech act stanza suffering suggests tell things third-person tion tone traditional truth trying turns virtues voice Whitman's wish woman writer Yeats Yeats's