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Genre/Form: | Electronic books Criticism, interpretation, etc |
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Additional Physical Format: | Print version: Callaghan, Madeleine. Shelley's Living Artistry: Letters, Poems, Plays. Liverpool : Liverpool University Press, ©2017 |
Named Person: | Percy Bysshe Shelley; Percy Bysshe Shelley; Percy Bysshe Shelley |
Material Type: | Document, Internet resource |
Document Type: | Internet Resource, Computer File |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Madeleine Callaghan |
ISBN: | 9781786948120 1786948125 |
OCLC Number: | 1013820648 |
Description: | 1 online resource (296 pages) |
Contents: | |
Series Title: | Liverpool English Texts and Studies LUP. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
'Callaghan reads Shelley's letters and their biographical concerns to illuminate his poetry, tracing the shifting relationship between the poet's poetry and life. She shows that Shelley refused and exploded the boundaries between the personal and poetic by reconfiguring life events within his poetry and drama. The boundary between the poet's life and art is a difficult one for a critic and often less useful than close textual analysis. Callaghan makes a case for the ways in which Shelley transmutes the personal into transformative poetry with Shelley's understanding that 'the poet man are of two different natures' and that the 'poem is the very image of life expressed in its eternal truth', where truth and eternity clash.'Tears in the Fence 'Callaghan is a confident judge and writer ... an able close reader, whose readings are equally adept at handling the discursive tenor of Shelley's often philosophically involved poetry and the intricacies of his metrical and stanzaic patterning, and a diligent scholar with an impressive command of the secondary literature on Shelley's work. She is clearly unafraid of overturning critical commonplaces that have become established in Shelley studies and, moreover, she makes a compelling case for taking the early poetry more seriously on artistic terms than it has been so far.Shelley's Living Artistry will make study of his correspondence much more central to future accounts of his work. Shelley's Living Artistry is, then, a notable contribution to contemporary study of Shelley and, in particular, provides a useful reminder of the different genres and modes in which he wrote and the often taut relations between them.'Ross Wilson, Cambridge Quarterly 'A valuable, ranging and deeply informed contribution...to anyreader sympathetic to neo-formalism, and indeed any reader sympathetic to Shelley(who can be as frustrating a poet as a brilliantly incandescent one), thisstudy will repay attention.'Christopher Stokes, The BARS Review 'InShelley's Living Artistry: Letters, Poems, Plays, Madeleine Callaghan offers astimulating and absorbing account of the way that Shelley self-consciously stageshis artistic development in his poetry and his efforts to "[transmute] the drossof the personal into the gold of art"...In short, Shelley's Living Artistry makes a convincing case for readingShelley's poetry "through the lens of the letters" so as to bring into focusimportant aspects of his artistry and develop "a fuller consideration of Shelley'spoetic achievement".'Jonathan Quayle, English: Journal of the English Association 'Shelley's art, in Callaghan's monograph, is living. It is not something that has been created or recreated, but rather like the statue of Hermione in Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale, needs only to be touched to feel its living warmth.'Dana Van Kooy, European Romantic Review 'This is a compellingly argued book, and it represents a serious and substantial addition to Shelley scholarship. What is particularly refreshing, however, is that Callaghan is not simply an expert scholarly reader of Shelley. She quite clearly loves his poetry and is not afraid to say so, or to reach for superlatives when only superlatives will do. It is this passion for the poetry and for understanding the depths of Shelley's artistry that drives her close reading and animates her account of individual texts. Surely a poet as attuned to the revolutionary potential of reading as was Shelley would be pleased to have found such a reader.'Daisy Hay, Keats-Shelley Journal Read more...

