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The Poetics of Impersonality: T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound
Harvard University Press, 1987 Cloth: 978-0-674-67858-3 Library of Congress Classification PS310.S34E45 1987 Dewey Decimal Classification 821.91209353
ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound dominated English poetry and criticism in the first half of the twentieth century. At the center of their practice is what Maud Ellmann calls the poetics of impersonality. Her examination yields a set of superb readings of the major poems of the modernist canon. Eliot and Pound mounted attack after attack on nineteenth-century poetry from Wordsworth to Swinburne, poetry they believed nurtured an unhealthy cult of the self. They wanted poetry to be a transparent medium that gives its readers access to reality and meaning. Poetry, they argued, should efface itself, because writing that calls attention to itself calls attention to the distinctive personality of the writer. Ellmann convincingly shows that their arguments are self-contradictory and that their efforts to eliminate personality merely reinstate it in a different guise. See other books on: 1885-1972 | 1888-1965 | Identity (Psychology) in literature | Pound, Ezra | Self in literature See other titles from Harvard University Press |
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