"Cold Pastoral": Irony and the Eclogue in the Poetry of the Southern Fugitives (Literature) "Cold Pastoral": Irony and the Eclogue in the Poetry of the Southern Fugitives (Literature)

"Cold Pastoral": Irony and the Eclogue in the Poetry of the Southern Fugitives (Literature‪)‬

Studia Anglica Posnaniensia: international review of English Studies 2008, Annual, 44

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

ABSTRACT This article attempts to analyze a shift in the ancient genre of pastoral in the poetry of the Southern modernists, Allen Tate and John Crowe Ransom, a shift that seeks to account for the historical penetration of nature and that is often aestheticized as the ironical counter-text of the "cold" pastoral. Drawing upon the models of pastoral found in Lewis P. Simpson and William Empson, the article argues that the essential trick of the old pastoral--the implication, as Empson calls it, of a beautiful relation between rich and poor--does not work within nineteenth-century Southern literature because the black resists being turned into a gardener in the garden. The article then examines Tate's "The swimmers", a poem that narrates Tate's discovery as a young child of the aftermath of a lynching, as an expression of this unworkability in an idiom of what Tate called "pastoral terror".

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2008
January 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
17
Pages
PUBLISHER
Adam Mickiewicz University
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
212.4
KB

More Books Like This

Palgrave Advances in John Clare Studies Palgrave Advances in John Clare Studies
2020
A Literary Biography of Robin Blaser A Literary Biography of Robin Blaser
2019

More Books by Studia Anglica Posnaniensia: international review of English Studies

Kenneth Burke on Shakespeare. Kenneth Burke on Shakespeare.
2009
The Etymology of Modern English Monkey (Linguistics) The Etymology of Modern English Monkey (Linguistics)
2008
Prepositional Entries in English-Polish Dictionaries (Linguistics) Prepositional Entries in English-Polish Dictionaries (Linguistics)
2008
'My Cours, That Hath So Wyde for to Turne,/ Hath Moore Power Than Woot Any Man': The Children of Saturn in Chaucer's Monk's Tale (Literature) (Critical Essay) 'My Cours, That Hath So Wyde for to Turne,/ Hath Moore Power Than Woot Any Man': The Children of Saturn in Chaucer's Monk's Tale (Literature) (Critical Essay)
2004
The Dental Suffix in Modern Icelandic: Phonology, Morpho(Phono)Logy, And the Lexicon (1) (Critical Essay) The Dental Suffix in Modern Icelandic: Phonology, Morpho(Phono)Logy, And the Lexicon (1) (Critical Essay)
2002
The Elements of Anglo-Saxon Wisdom Poetry in the Exeter Book Riddles (Critical Essay) The Elements of Anglo-Saxon Wisdom Poetry in the Exeter Book Riddles (Critical Essay)
2002