Wordsworth’s Trauma and Poetry

Wordsworth’s Trauma and Poetry
Title Wordsworth’s Trauma and Poetry PDF eBook
Author Richard E. Matlak
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Total Pages 173
Release 2024-07-11
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1040035574

Download Wordsworth’s Trauma and Poetry Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Based upon the testimony of Thomas Carlyle, most biographers acknowledge that Wordsworth witnessed the beheading of the journalist Antoine Gorsas in October 1793 during the Reign of Terror. But they go no further. This study reads the Poet’s reactions to the Terror in passages from The Prelude as explicitly about his twenty-three-year-old-self witnessing the gory deaths of Gorsas and others, which caused post-traumatic stress disorder and its symptoms, exacerbated by guilt for abandoning his French lover and their child a year earlier. Following a chronological arc from October 1793, when the trauma began, until its conclusion in October 1803, when Wordsworth became a poet-soldier, I examine poetic works from The Borderers (1796), the “Discharged Soldier’ (1798), the Two-Part Prelude (1799), Home at Grasmere (1800), and the Liberty sonnets (1803), to follow the Poet working through anxiety, fear, and remorse to a resolution.

Wordsworth's Trauma and Poetry

Wordsworth's Trauma and Poetry
Title Wordsworth's Trauma and Poetry PDF eBook
Author RICHARD E. MATLAK
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 0
Release 2024-06-12
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780367715427

Download Wordsworth's Trauma and Poetry Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This study reads the Poet's reactions to the Terror in passages from The Prelude as explicitly about his twenty-three-year-old-self witnessing the gory deaths of Gorsas and others, which caused post-traumatic stress disorder and its symptoms, exacerbated by guilt for abandoning his French lover and their child a year earlier.

Trauma, Transcendence, and Trust

Trauma, Transcendence, and Trust
Title Trauma, Transcendence, and Trust PDF eBook
Author T. Brennan
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 351
Release 2011-01-03
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0230117546

Download Trauma, Transcendence, and Trust Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Thomas Brennan finds roots of the 'sensibility of trauma' by returning to the work of Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Eliot. By reading these poets of mourning through the framework of trauma, Brennan reflects on our traumatized moment and weighs two potential responses - the fantasy of transcendence and the ethic of trust.

Wordsworth and Feeling

Wordsworth and Feeling
Title Wordsworth and Feeling PDF eBook
Author G. Kim Blank
Publisher Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press
Total Pages 284
Release 1995
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780838636008

Download Wordsworth and Feeling Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Wordsworth and Feeling returns to Wordsworth's personal history in order to locate and contextualize some of the most remarkable poetry in the English language. In this study, G. Kim Blank details how this poetry evolves out of Wordsworth's radical subjectivity, but the most pressing feature of that subjectivity is the cluster of subjects - loss, guilt, suffering, endurance, death - which appears throughout much of his poetry up until 1802-4.

William Wordsworth's The Prelude

William Wordsworth's The Prelude
Title William Wordsworth's The Prelude PDF eBook
Author Stephen Gill
Publisher Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages 417
Release 2006-08-31
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0195180917

Download William Wordsworth's The Prelude Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

William Wordsworth's poem 'The Prelude' is a fascinating work, both as an autobiography and as a fragment of historical evidence from the revolutionary and post-revolutionary years. This volume gathers together 13 essays on 'The Prelude', and is useful as a companion for students and general readers of Wordsworth's greatest poem.

Wordsworthian Errancies

Wordsworthian Errancies
Title Wordsworthian Errancies PDF eBook
Author David Collings
Publisher
Total Pages 312
Release 1994
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN

Download Wordsworthian Errancies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

According to David Collings, Wordsworth interpreted the outbreak of war between England and France in 1793 as a cataclysmic event, one whose utterly disfiguring effect he would trace in his work over the next decade. Expanding upon this extravagant interpretation of events, Collings argues, Wordsworth constructed a poetics of cultural dismemberment - a way for culture to imagine that it survives in the midst of its own destruction. In Wordsworthian Errancies, Collings challenges prevailing critical approaches to Romantic poetry by describing and critiquing this deconstructive account of culture in Wordsworth's poetry. Drawing ideas from deconstruction, psychoanalysis, Marxism, feminism, and queer theory, Collings's reading reveals a radically new Wordsworth, one who is far more concerned with various "queer" modes of sexuality than previously suspected. In a provocative reading of The Prelude, for example, Collings argues that Wordsworth associated his poetic power with homoerotic masochistic fantasies and with his involuntary delight in traumatic events. He also redefines the debate concerning the politics of Wordsworth's poetry: disputing recent critics who claim that Wordsworth retreated from history into a poetry of the self, Collings argues instead that the very notion of the solitary, autobiographical subject derived from Wordsworth's sense of cultural trauma. The suspect dimension of Wordsworth's poetry, Collings concludes, is not its retreat from history but rather its claim that history is disaster.

The Making of Poetry

The Making of Poetry
Title The Making of Poetry PDF eBook
Author Adam Nicolson
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Total Pages 448
Release 2020-01-21
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0374721270

Download The Making of Poetry Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Brimming with poetry, art, and nature writing—Wordsworth and Coleridge as you've never seen them before June 1797 to September 1798 is the most famous year in English poetry. Out of it came Samuel Taylor Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and “Kubla Khan,” as well as his unmatched hymns to friendship and fatherhood, and William Wordsworth’s revolutionary songs in Lyrical Ballads along with “Tintern Abbey,” Wordsworth's paean to the unity of soul and cosmos, love and understanding. In The Making of Poetry, Adam Nicolson embeds himself in the reality of this unique moment, exploring the idea that these poems came from this particular place and time, and that only by experiencing the physical circumstances of the year, in all weathers and all seasons, at night and at dawn, in sunlit reverie and moonlit walks, can the genesis of the poetry start to be understood. The poetry Wordsworth and Coleridge made was not from settled conclusions but from the adventure on which they embarked, thinking of poetry as a challenge to all received ideas, stripping away the dead matter, looking to shed consciousness and so change the world. What emerges is a portrait of these great figures seen not as literary monuments but as young men, troubled, ambitious, dreaming of a vision of wholeness, knowing they had greatness in them but still in urgent search of the paths toward it. The artist Tom Hammick accompanied Nicolson for much of the year, making woodcuts from the fallen timber in the park at Alfoxden where the Wordsworths lived. Interspersed throughout the book, his images bridge the centuries, depicting lives at the source of our modern sensibility: a psychic landscape of doubt and possibility, full of beauty and thick with desire for a kind of connectedness that seems permanently at hand and yet always out of reach.