Audens Apologies for Poetry :Auden's Apologies for Poetry ( Princeton Legacy Library )

Publication subTitle :Auden's Apologies for Poetry

Publication series :Princeton Legacy Library

Author: McDiarmid Lucy;;;  

Publisher: Princeton University Press‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9781400860845

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780691067841

Subject: I Literature;I106.2 Poetry

Keyword: 文学

Language: ENG

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Description

Common wisdom has it that when Auden left England for New York in January 1939, he had already written his best poems. He left behind (most critics believe) all the idealisms of the 1930s and all serious concerns to become an unserious poet, a writer of ingenious, agreeable, minor lyrics. Lucy McDiarmid argues that such readers, spoiled by the simple intensities of apocalypse, distort and misjudge Auden's greatest work. She shows that once Auden was freed from the obligation to criticize and reform the society of his native country, he devoted his imaginative energies to commentary on art. And about art he was never complaisant: with greater passion than he had ever used to undermine "bourgeois" society, Auden undermined literature. Every major poem and every essay became a retractio, a statement of art's frivolity, vanity, and guilt. Auden's Apologies for Poetry, then, sets forth the unorthodox notion that the chief subject of later, "New Yorker" Auden is the insignificance of poetry. Commenting on all the major poems and essays from the 1930s through the 1960s, and analyzing manuscript revisions and unpublished works, it charts the changes in Auden's poetics in the light of his shift from an oral to a written model of poetry. In his earliest work Auden voices the tentative hope that poems can be like loving spoken words, transforming and redeeming, themselves carriers of value. After 1939 he takes for granted a written model. His later essays and poems deny art spiritua

Chapter

Preface

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

Introduction the Finest Tumbler of His Day

1. Pardon and "Pardon"

2. The Generous Hour: Poems and Plays of the 1930s

3. The Other Side of the Mirror: New Year Letter, for the Time Being, and the Sea and the Mirror

4. Apologies for Poetry: Poems 1948—1973

Conclusion Writing This for You to Open When I Am Gone

Appendix: The Manuscript Drafts of New Year Letter, Part III, Opening Passage

Index

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