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Strange Power of Speech Susan Eilenberg (Assistant Professor of English, Assistant Professor of English, SUNY Buffalo)

Strange Power of Speech By Susan Eilenberg (Assistant Professor of English, Assistant Professor of English, SUNY Buffalo)

Summary

This theoretical study argues that ideas about propriety, property and possession inform the images of literary authority, textual identity and poetic figuration that can be found in the works of Coleridge and Wordsworth.

Strange Power of Speech Summary

Strange Power of Speech: Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Literary Possession by Susan Eilenberg (Assistant Professor of English, Assistant Professor of English, SUNY Buffalo)

Eilenberg's subject is the relationship between tropes of literary property and signification in the writings and literary politics of Wordsworth and Coleridge. She argues that a complex of ideas about property, propriety, and possession informs the images of literary authority, textual identity, and poetic figuration found in the two writers' major work. During the period of their closest collaboration as well as at points later in their careers, Wordsworth and Coleridge took as their primary material the images of property and propriety upon which definitions of meaning and figuration have traditionally depended, grounding these images in writings about landed and spiritual property, material and intellectual theft, dispossession by banks and possession by demons. The writings and the politics generated by the literalization of such images can be read as allegorical of the structures and processes of signification. Each such gesture addresses in some way the fundamental question - who owns language, or who controls meaning? Eilenberg's approach brings to bear a combination of deconstructive, psychoanalytic, and both new and literary historical methods to provide a deeper understanding of the relationship between two of the major figures of English Romanticism as well as fresh insight into what is at stake in the analogy between the verbal and the material or the literary and the economic.

Strange Power of Speech Reviews

`Eilenberg's well-written, clever book shares the recent fashionable interest in poetry's social dimension. She is an imaginative, discriminating reader of poetry.' London Review of Books
'Eilenberg writes intelligently and persuasively about Wordsworth's and Coleridge's differing attitudes to language, property, possession, originality, authority ... The arguments Eilenberg marshals in defence of this link are complex, subtle, learned, and powerfully expressed (in language largely free of jargon).' Times Literary Supplement

Additional information

GOR013396841
9780195068566
0195068564
Strange Power of Speech: Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Literary Possession by Susan Eilenberg (Assistant Professor of English, Assistant Professor of English, SUNY Buffalo)
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
1992-05-14
300
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Strange Power of Speech