Science In Modern Poetry
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Author | : John Holmes |
Publisher | : Liverpool University Press |
Total Pages | : 251 |
Release | : 2012-01-01 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1846318092 |
Over the last thirty years, more and more critics and scholars have come to recognize the significant influence of science on literature. This collection of essays focuses specifically on what poets in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have made of modern scientific developments. In these twelve essays, leading experts on modern poetry, literature, and science explore how poets have used scientific language in their poems, how poetry can offer new perspectives on science, and how the two cultures can and have come together in the work of poets from Britain, Ireland, America, and Australia.
Author | : David Burchell |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 248 |
Release | : 2017-03-02 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1351901788 |
These essays throw new light on the complex relations between science, literature and rhetoric as avenues to discovery in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Scholars from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds examine the agency of early modern poets, playwrights, essayists, philosophers, natural philosophers and artists in remaking their culture and reforming ideas about human understanding. Analyzing the ways in which the works of such diverse writers as Shakespeare, Bacon, Hobbes, Milton, Cavendish, Boyle, Pope and Behn related to contemporary epistemological debates, these essays move us toward a better understanding of interactions between the sciences and the humanities during a seminal phase in the emergence of modern Western thought.
Author | : Robert Crawford |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press, USA |
Total Pages | : 251 |
Release | : 2006-09-07 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0199258120 |
A collaboration between leading poets and scientists, this title shows through its form, and through practice, as well as reflection, that poetry and science can meet with productive results. It also shows how modes of scientific knowledge and of poetic making continue to be intertwined.
Author | : Bryan Walpert |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 254 |
Release | : 2011-09-26 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1136587284 |
This book examines types of resistance in contemporary poetry to the authority of scientific knowledge, tracing the source of these resistances to both their literary precedents and the scientific zeitgeists that helped to produce them. Walpert argues that contemporary poetry offers a palimpsest of resistance, using as case studies the poets Alison Hawthorne Deming, Pattiann Rogers, Albert Goldbarth, and Joan Retallack to trace the recapitulation of romantic arguments (inherited from Keats, Shelly, and Coleridge, which in turn were produced in part in response to Newtonian physics), modernist arguments (inherited from Eliot and Pound, arguments influenced in part by relativity and quantum theory), and postmodernist arguments (arguments informed by post-structuralist theory, e.g. Barthes, Derrida, Foucault, with affinities to arguments for the limitations of science in the philosophy, sociology, and rhetoric of science). Some of these poems reveal the discursive ideologies of scientific languageāreveal, in other words, the performativity of scientific language. In doing so, these poems themselves can also be read as performative acts and, therefore, as forms of intervention rather than representation. Reading Retallack alongside science studies scholar Karen Barad, the book concludes by proposing that viewing knowledge as a form of intervention, rather than representation, offers a bridge between contemporary poetry and science.
Author | : Arthur Melville Clark |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 100 |
Release | : 1922 |
Genre | : American poetry |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Steven Meyer |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 353 |
Release | : 2018-05-03 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1107079721 |
This Companion shows how literature and science inform one another and that they're more closely aligned than they typically appear.
Author | : |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 702 |
Release | : 1875 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : |
The Poetical gazette; the official organ of the Poetry society and a review of poetical affairs, nos. 4-7 issued as supplements to the Academy, v. 79, Oct. 15, Nov. 5, Dec. 3 and 31, 1910
Author | : |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 892 |
Release | : 1908 |
Genre | : Art |
ISBN | : |
Author | : |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 818 |
Release | : 1877 |
Genre | : American literature |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Howard Marchitello |
Publisher | : Springer |
Total Pages | : 571 |
Release | : 2017-02-27 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1137463619 |
This book is about the complex ways in which science and literature are mutually-informing and mutually-sustaining. It does not cast the literary and the scientific as distinct, but rather as productively in-distinct cultural practices: for the two dozen new essays collected here, the presiding concern is no longer to ask how literary writers react to scientific writers, but rather to study how literary and scientific practices are imbricated. These specially-commissioned essays from top scholars in the area range across vast territories and produce seemingly unlikely unions: between physics and rhetoric, math and Milton, Boyle and the Bible, plague and plays, among many others. In these essays so-called scientific writing turns out to traffic in metaphor, wit, imagination, and playfulness normally associated with literature provides material forms and rhetorical strategies for thinking physics, mathematics, archeology, and medicine.