The essay explores Shelley’s stance on the verbal medium, by examining his two ways of considering language. On one hand, Shelley’s language appears to have primarily communicative purposes and, in his more political output, serves as a vehicle to reach the lower classes, exhort them, and ultimately set them free from linguistic hegemonic policies aimed at subordinating them. On the other hand, Shelley’s discourse seems to be directed towards a self-referential reflection, in which the linguistic medium comes to be regarded as an obscure and arbitrary code that imprisons thought – and consequently artistic conception – in artificial patterns that the poet needs to dismantle in order to re-establish a direct connection between his original c...
The Politics of Lyric: A Social History of Shelley’s Forms analyzes, from the standpoint of class po...
This essay offers some new perspectives on affinities between the writing and thought of Percy Shell...
There is a striking paradox in early modernist theory and practice concerning the nature of poetic d...
The essay explores Shelley’s stance on the verbal medium, by examining his two ways of considering l...
First paragraph: In 1811, Shelley wrote to his grandfather, 'language is given us to express ideas -...
This paper analyzes Percy Bysshe Shelley’s unique application of the philosophy and characteristics ...
Critics have constantly engaged in the topic of how male Romantic-era writers’ views of language inf...
In 1821, Percy Shelley argues that “having enslaved the elements, [Man] remains himself a slave,” an...
Judged in the context of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century opposition rhetoric, the works of Percy ...
Reading Shelley's Defence of Poetry in the context of the financial crisis in our own day which has ...
This dissertation studies Wallace Stevens? ideas and practice of poetic language with a focus on the...
This essay was born of a desire to understand the relationship between poetry and politics in a mean...
This dissertation investigates the relation between aesthetics and politics by interpreting three ex...
One consequence of the anti-Jacobin fervor that swept England after 1789 was an increasingly aggress...
On the premise that examination of a poet's language can provide a valid and significant approach to...
The Politics of Lyric: A Social History of Shelley’s Forms analyzes, from the standpoint of class po...
This essay offers some new perspectives on affinities between the writing and thought of Percy Shell...
There is a striking paradox in early modernist theory and practice concerning the nature of poetic d...
The essay explores Shelley’s stance on the verbal medium, by examining his two ways of considering l...
First paragraph: In 1811, Shelley wrote to his grandfather, 'language is given us to express ideas -...
This paper analyzes Percy Bysshe Shelley’s unique application of the philosophy and characteristics ...
Critics have constantly engaged in the topic of how male Romantic-era writers’ views of language inf...
In 1821, Percy Shelley argues that “having enslaved the elements, [Man] remains himself a slave,” an...
Judged in the context of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century opposition rhetoric, the works of Percy ...
Reading Shelley's Defence of Poetry in the context of the financial crisis in our own day which has ...
This dissertation studies Wallace Stevens? ideas and practice of poetic language with a focus on the...
This essay was born of a desire to understand the relationship between poetry and politics in a mean...
This dissertation investigates the relation between aesthetics and politics by interpreting three ex...
One consequence of the anti-Jacobin fervor that swept England after 1789 was an increasingly aggress...
On the premise that examination of a poet's language can provide a valid and significant approach to...
The Politics of Lyric: A Social History of Shelley’s Forms analyzes, from the standpoint of class po...
This essay offers some new perspectives on affinities between the writing and thought of Percy Shell...
There is a striking paradox in early modernist theory and practice concerning the nature of poetic d...