Romanticism coincided with two major historical developments: the
Industrial Revolution, and with it, a turning point in our
relationship to the earth, its inhabitants, and its climate. Drawing
on Marxism and philosophy of science, The Calamity Form shines new
light on Romantic poetry, identifying a number of rhetorical tropes
used by writers to underscore their very failure to make sense of our
move to industrialization. Anahid Nersessian explores works by
Friedrich Hölderlin, William Wordsworth, John Keats, and others to
argue that as the human and ecological costs of industry became clear,
Romantic poetry adopted formal strategies—among them parataxis, the
setting of elements side by side in a manner suggestive of
postindustrial dissonance, and apostrophe, here an address to an
absent or vanishing natural environment—as it tried and failed to
narrate the calamities of capitalism. These tropes reflect how
Romantic authors took their bewilderment and turned it into a poetics:
a theory of writing, reading, and understanding poetry as an eminently
critical act. Throughout, Nersessian pushes back against recent
attempts to see literature as a source of information on par with
historical or scientific data, arguing instead for an irreducibility
of poetic knowledge. Revealing the ways in which these Romantic works
are of their time but not about it, The Calamity Form ultimately
exposes the nature of poetry’s relationship to capital—and
capital’s ability to hide how it works.
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On Poetry and Social Life
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226701455
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter