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Coleridge, language and the sublime ...
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Stokes, Christopher, (1981-)
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Coleridge, language and the sublime = from transcendence to finitude /
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Coleridge, language and the sublime/ by Christopher Stokes.
Reminder of title:
from transcendence to finitude /
Author:
Stokes, Christopher,
Published:
New York :Palgrave Macmillan, : 2011.,
Description:
p. cm.
[NT 15003449]:
Introduction -- Language, Longinus, emotion: "violently agitated by a real passion": Longinus and Coleridge's effusions; "the self-watching subtilizing mind": the impassioned self in the 1798 Fears in solitude quarto -- Terror, Burke, ethics: "cruel wrongs and strange distress": an ethical terror-sublime in "The destiny of nations"; "my soul in agony": the terrors of subjectivity in "The rime of the ancient mariner" -- Representation, Kant, theology: "ye signs and wonders of the element! utter forth God": divine presence and divine withdrawal in the natural sublime; "what never is but only is to be": the ontology of the Coleridgean sublime -- Conclusion: "a specimen of the sublime dashed to pieces": sublimity in The biographia literaria and the limbo constellation.
Subject:
Sublime, The, in literature. -
Online resource:
http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230295063An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information
ISBN:
9780230295063 (electronic bk.)
Coleridge, language and the sublime = from transcendence to finitude /
Stokes, Christopher,1981-
Coleridge, language and the sublime
from transcendence to finitude /[electronic resource] :by Christopher Stokes. - New York :Palgrave Macmillan,2011. - p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Language, Longinus, emotion: "violently agitated by a real passion": Longinus and Coleridge's effusions; "the self-watching subtilizing mind": the impassioned self in the 1798 Fears in solitude quarto -- Terror, Burke, ethics: "cruel wrongs and strange distress": an ethical terror-sublime in "The destiny of nations"; "my soul in agony": the terrors of subjectivity in "The rime of the ancient mariner" -- Representation, Kant, theology: "ye signs and wonders of the element! utter forth God": divine presence and divine withdrawal in the natural sublime; "what never is but only is to be": the ontology of the Coleridgean sublime -- Conclusion: "a specimen of the sublime dashed to pieces": sublimity in The biographia literaria and the limbo constellation.
Coleridge, Language and the Sublime is the first full-length study to engage Coleridge's work through the aesthetics of the sublime. It argues for a double-edged Coleridge whose poetic and metaphysical commitments to transcendence were played out, under the sign of sublimity, against his sharp awareness of weakness and lack. Traversing the themes of language, terror and representation, his position in a conversation about finitude - a conversation that encompasses Longinus, Burke and Kant as well as modern theorists of the sublime - is shown to be an important element of our own post-Romantic legacy. Drawing on close readings of the best known poetry (the Conversation lyrics, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner) as well as more obscure poems, his prose works and notebooks, this study offers a vibrant, alternative Coleridge who is neither the magisterial architect of Romantic idealism, nor disillusioned and dejected, but a profound thinker of what it means to be at the limits of thought, language and experience.
Electronic reproduction.
Basingstoke, England :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2011.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
ISBN: 9780230295063 (electronic bk.)
Source: 470282Palgrave Macmillanhttp://www.palgraveconnect.comSubjects--Personal Names:
1310121
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor,
1772-1834--Philosophy.Subjects--Topical Terms:
681281
Sublime, The, in literature.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
542853
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: PR4487.S92 / S76 2011
Dewey Class. No.: 821/.7
Coleridge, language and the sublime = from transcendence to finitude /
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Introduction -- Language, Longinus, emotion: "violently agitated by a real passion": Longinus and Coleridge's effusions; "the self-watching subtilizing mind": the impassioned self in the 1798 Fears in solitude quarto -- Terror, Burke, ethics: "cruel wrongs and strange distress": an ethical terror-sublime in "The destiny of nations"; "my soul in agony": the terrors of subjectivity in "The rime of the ancient mariner" -- Representation, Kant, theology: "ye signs and wonders of the element! utter forth God": divine presence and divine withdrawal in the natural sublime; "what never is but only is to be": the ontology of the Coleridgean sublime -- Conclusion: "a specimen of the sublime dashed to pieces": sublimity in The biographia literaria and the limbo constellation.
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Coleridge, Language and the Sublime is the first full-length study to engage Coleridge's work through the aesthetics of the sublime. It argues for a double-edged Coleridge whose poetic and metaphysical commitments to transcendence were played out, under the sign of sublimity, against his sharp awareness of weakness and lack. Traversing the themes of language, terror and representation, his position in a conversation about finitude - a conversation that encompasses Longinus, Burke and Kant as well as modern theorists of the sublime - is shown to be an important element of our own post-Romantic legacy. Drawing on close readings of the best known poetry (the Conversation lyrics, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner) as well as more obscure poems, his prose works and notebooks, this study offers a vibrant, alternative Coleridge who is neither the magisterial architect of Romantic idealism, nor disillusioned and dejected, but a profound thinker of what it means to be at the limits of thought, language and experience.
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