Designs on Truth: The Poetics of the Augustan Mock-EpicDesigns on Truth provides a reinterpretation of Augustan poetry, not as works to be defended before the court of Matthew Arnold and the Romantic tradition but as works that examine the rich relationships among text, culture, and world. In Designs on Truth, Gregory Colomb identifies the characteristics of the mock-epic and argues that the form had developed formal expectations. In making this argument, he explains the intentions of the writers of mock-epics, and expands our conception of the interest and significance of such poems. By demonstrating how these poems are supported by the genre's poetics, he brings out ways these poems differ from other &"Augustan&" poems such as the Horatian epistles that are often discussed with them. Designs on Truth puts into question the distinction between history and poetry in the mock-epic, examining it at three levels of poetic structure: fable (global narrative structure), and portraits (characterological narrative structure). Focusing chiefly on the mock-epic's representations in terms of class and &"kind,&" this study returns historical particulars to the central role that the poets had always given them and seeks to understand how they are made poetic. Designs on Truth shows how the poems themselves subvert any easy distinction between historical and poetic particulars. This often philosophical genre is itself a reconsideration of the role of reference (fact) and judgment (value) in representation. This study shows how representation and judgment work in the mock-epic, and how together they stand at the heart of the dominant Augustan poetic. Colomb also provides new readings of the mock-epic, including the first comprehensive reading of The Dispensary since the eighteenth century. |
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... only to the novel ) it most success- fully forges the uneasy alliance with low forms that is one crucial de- terminant of Augustan literature ; because ( along with the novel ) it struggles to create a coherent concept of fiction .
( 1.57-58 ) In its emphasis on argument and fiction , epic theory was consonant with the poetic inherited from the Renaissance : " Restoration critics ... are bound firmly to the earlier by their concern with poetry's moral 7.
It left a clear program for the poet : The author who invented a fable ... would understand that his fiction should contain general truths rather than specific refer- ences to individual persons and events in his own times .
By all accounts , the epic fable is general and fictional , its theme the destiny of an entire community . Its action " must be General Action ; something in which all might be equally concern'd " ( Dennis , 1.56 ) , a necessity ...
( TE , V.50-51 ) The Allegory and the Machinery are fictional , but the Persons and their Characters are ... That suspension , not any emphasis on Pope as a maker of fictions , is the point of Pope's even slier remark on the occasion of ...
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Contenido
Prologue | 33 |
Naming Names | 35 |
Dullness by Its Proper Name 3 | 59 |
Urban Gravitation | 79 |
Ranging Afield | 95 |
Prologue | 119 |
From Caricature to Portraiture 6 | 129 |
Dishonourable Confederacies | 145 |
A Taxonomy of Dunces 8 | 163 |
A Succession of Monarchs 9 | 183 |
Epilogue | 207 |
209 | |
219 | |
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Designs on Truth: The Poetics of the Augustan Mock-Epic Gregory G. Colomb Vista previa limitada - 1992 |