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£45.99

The Poetics of Uncontrollability in Keats’s Endymion

Language Theory and Romantic Periodicals
By: Anna Anselmo

£45.99

Anselmo reconstructs the linguistic context of the 18th and early-19th centuries to explain the reviewers’ unease regarding Endymion. She shows that 18th-century prescriptivism arose from an anxiety of language and the desire to control language informed Romantic criticism.

Endymion is the trâit d'union between Keats’s juvenilia and his better known, and conventionally more mature, works. By its nature, it is a transitional work,…
£45.99
£45.99
1-4438-0533-5 , , , ,
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Endymion is the trâit d’union between Keats’s juvenilia and his better known, and conventionally more mature, works. By its nature, it is a transitional work, and thus gives the scholar special insight into the development of Keats’s poetics and idiom. Moreover, Endymion is the Keatsian work which most rattled and provoked critics of its time.

This book reconstructs the linguistic context of the eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries in order to explain the reviewers’ unease with regard to Endymion. It shows that eighteenth-century prescriptivism arose from a deep-seated anxiety of language, Lockean in origin, and that the ensuing desire to stabilize and therefore control language informed Romantic criticism in general, and the criticism of Keats’s work in particular, more fundamentally than politics could or did. The imaginative and linguistic markers of Endymion are mapped and analysed in order to prove that Keats produced a “poetics of uncontrollability”, a series of textual and stylistic strategies, which violated linguistic and narrative standards, and which were, therefore, perceived as unsettling.

Anna Anselmo received a PhD in English Literature from the Department of Linguistic Sciences and Foreign Literatures at the Catholic University of Milan, Italy, and is a Research Assistant at the University of Valle d’Aosta, Italy. Her research interests range from the long eighteenth century to cultural theory and poetry of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Her publications include an edited collection of twentieth-century verse, Twentieth-Century Poets: a selection with notes (2011), and several articles, including “‘Dress is the Most Fleeting of the Arts’: Fashion Words between France and England, 1750–1820” (2014); “Endymion and Romance: a crescendo of thoughts on Keats’s most ‘exuberant’ work” (2012); and “Fictionalizing Keats’s Last Journey: the Young Man and the Sea” (2011).

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-4438-0533-5
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-0533-9
  • Date of Publication: 2017-01-25

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-7913-4
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-7913-2
  • Date of Publication: 2017-01-25

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: D, JFC, HB
  • BISAC: LIT004120, LIT024040, LIT014000, LIT006000, LIT024030, LAN015000
  • THEMA: D, JBCC, NH
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