Glandular Omnism and Beyond: The Victorian Spasmodic Epic (Critical Essay) Glandular Omnism and Beyond: The Victorian Spasmodic Epic (Critical Essay)

Glandular Omnism and Beyond: The Victorian Spasmodic Epic (Critical Essay‪)‬

Victorian Poetry 2004, Winter, 42, 4

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Publisher Description

DESPITE THE DISREGARD IN WHICH IT HAS DWELT FOR A CENTURY AND A HALF, the Victorian movement called spasmodism matters to literary history because of the maximal registration it gave to the atmosphere that conditioned anglophone poetry circa 1850. This is so whether we consult the larger cultural barometer of contemporary critical debate or look to the prosodic and rhetorical details of the many mid-century poems that attest spasmodism's practical influence. Still, the pressure that was, in its hectic day, everywhere has long since vanished without conspicuous trace from our working literary history, remaining detectable only by the radar of specialists whose claims are justly liable to dismissal as special pleading. A first step, therefore, toward rehabilitation of this unduly neglected movement is to assure general readers of poetry that they know spasmodism better than they think. Spasmodist poetics wrote very large certain Romantic tenets that persist among us, involving the centrality of the self, the sanctity of the moment of heightened perception, and the totality of the truth to which creative poets enjoy privileged if fitful access. Call it transcendentalism with its American fans, or spilt religion with the tight-lipped Modernists of a century ago: spasmodism was Romanticism in bells and whistles, hawking in the limelight of the Victorian market a gospel to which the poets of the early century had given unanimous, if less indiscreet, assent. The pleasure Wordsworth took in his own feelings and volitions, Coleridge's supping on the milk of paradise, Shelley's hierophancy of the fading coal, Keats's squirmy erotic dissolves, that being-more-intense which Byron tasted in creativity--and, epitomizing all these, Blake's pulsation of the artery in which the poet's work is done--what these Romantic passages had in common Victorian spasmody enlarged upon, and inevitably vulgarized. (1) The pervasive myth that Romantic poetry privileged lyricism tout court here came true at last, and on an epic scale. It was spasmodism that fully lyricized narrative, or narratized lyric, in long texts aspiring to string together the best and happiest moments of the poet's mind, and to make the result prevail with a resonance as wide as culture.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2004
22 December
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
42
Pages
PUBLISHER
West Virginia University Press, University of West Virginia
SIZE
234.4
KB

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