Reframing Yeats

Reframing Yeats
Author: Charles I. Armstrong
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2013-08-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1623563534

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Reframing Yeats, the first critical study of its kind, traces the historical development of W. B. Yeats's writings across the genres, examining his poetry, autobiographical writings, criticism, and drama with the same critical analysis. While existing studies of Yeats's work choose between a biographical orientation or a formalist approach, Armstrong's study combines the theory of New Historicism and Hermeneutics: a theoretical approach that takes Yeatsian scholarship one step further. Grounded in history and informed by recent studies, this innovative approach presents new interpretations and understandings of Yeats's texts. As well as providing a fresh reading of "Among School Children" and situating his autobiographical writings in relation to preceding Victorian practices and contemporary experimentation, this groundbreaking work documents some of the most important existing readings of Yeats's relationship to history, Modernism and the literary genres.

Yeats, Revival, and the Temporalities of Irish Modernism

Yeats, Revival, and the Temporalities of Irish Modernism
Author: Gregory Castle
Publisher:
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2024-06-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1009411713

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Yeats, Revivalism, and the Temporalities of Irish Modernism offers a new understanding of a writer whose revivalist commitments are often regarded in terms of nostalgic yearning and dreamy romanticism. It counters such conventions by arguing that Yeats's revivalism is an inextricable part of his modernism. Gregory Castle provides a new reading of Yeats that is informed by the latest research on the Irish Revival and guided by the phenomenological idea of worldmaking, a way of looking at literature as an aesthetic space with its own temporal and spatial norms, its own atmosphere generated by language, narrative, and literary form. The dialectical relation between the various worlds created in the work of art generate new ways of accounting for time beyond the limits of historical thinking. It is just this worldmaking power that links Yeats's revivalism to his modernism and constructs new grounds for recognizing his life and work.

W. B. Yeats and the Language of Sculpture

W. B. Yeats and the Language of Sculpture
Author: Jack Quin
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2022-06-30
Genre: Art and literature
ISBN: 019284315X

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This book comprehensively examines the relationship between literature and sculpture in the work of W. B. Yeats, drawing on extensive archival research to offer revelatory new readings of the poet. The book traces Yeats's literary and critical engagement with Celtic Revival statuary, publicmonuments in Dublin, the coin designs of the Irish Free State, abstract sculpture by the Vorticists and modernists, and a variety of carvings, decorative sculptures, and objets d'art. By charting Yeats's early art school education in Dublin, his attempts to raise funds for public monuments in thecity, and to secure commissions for his favourite sculptors, the book documents a lifelong interest in the plastic arts. New and original readings of Yeats's poetry, drama, and prose criticism emerge from this concertedly inter-arts and interdisciplinary study.

The Critical Thought of W. B. Yeats

The Critical Thought of W. B. Yeats
Author: Wit Pietrzak
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2017-08-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3319600893

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This book focuses on W. B. Yeats’s critical writings, an aspect of his oeuvre which has been given limited treatment so far. It traces his critical work from his earliest articles, through to his occult treatises, and all the way to his last pamphlets, in which he sought to delineate the idea of a literary culture: a community of people willing to credit poetry with the central role in imagining and organising social praxis throughout society. The chapters of this study investigate the contexts in which Yeats’s thought developed, his many disputes over the shape of Irish cultural politics, the future of poetry and the place literature occupies in the world. What transpires is an image of Yeats who is strung between the impulses of faith in the existence of a supernatural order and ironic scepticism as to the possibility of ever capturing that order in language. This study is distinguished by its grounding of Yeats's critical agenda in a broader context through textual analysis. In addition, it organises and systematises his conceptions of poetry and its social role through its approach to his criticism as a fully-fledged area of his artistic practice. The monograph has been written within the framework of the project financed by The National Science Centre, Cracow, Poland, pursuant to the decision number DEC-2013/09/D/HS2/02782.

A Sacerdotal Poetics

A Sacerdotal Poetics
Author: Kathryn Wills
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2023-03-06
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1666708283

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This book offers a new way of understanding the old conflict between iconophiles and iconoclasts by exploring the way images in poetry are used by one poet, W. B. Yeats, and his translator, Yves Bonnefoy. Using the phenomenology of Jean-Luc Marion as a tool of interpretation, the book suggests further that translation is a significant act in which one entire theological world of a Protestant poet may become a completely different, Catholic one when the translation is performed by a culturally Catholic poet. For Bonnefoy, therefore, the act of translation becomes a profound act of hope.

The Gyroscopic Transformation of Self Quest in W. B. Yeats’s Poetry

The Gyroscopic Transformation of Self Quest in W. B. Yeats’s Poetry
Author: Özlem Saylan
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 111
Release: 2019-01-17
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1527526267

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Carrying a story to tell is the “ancient burden” of craftsmen, and it is one of the characteristics of the quest to find oneself, since a journey requires recognition of the aspects of self and anti–self. Like the speaker of his poems, W.B. Yeats has something to tell. His poetry draws nourishment from the battle between the dichotomies of self and anti–self, human and divine, mind and intellect, past and present, and body and soul. This book covers a selection of Yeats’s poems from 1889 to 1939, discussing them within the frame of the quest to find oneself and its gyroscopic transformation. The book illustrates that self is not a single entity, but has multiple layers, and it can be found within the quest in which it experiences a simultaneous transformation with every phase of the antithetical structure of gyroscopic movements. In addition, the way of the quest is cyclical; however, it is not a vicious cycle, since, in life, every end is a phase of a beginning and every beginning is a phase of an end.

Yeats The Poet

Yeats The Poet
Author: Edward Larrissy
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2014-07-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1317866657

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This work addresses Yeats's "antinomies", seeing their origin and structure in his divided Anglo-Irish inheritance and examining the notion of measure. It then explores how this relates to freemasonry, Celticism and Orientalism and looks at the Blakean esoteric language of contrariety and outline which provided Yeats with the vocabulary of self-understanding.

Riddled with Light

Riddled with Light
Author: Mark Sanders
Publisher: Stephen F. Austin University Press
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2014
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

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"The certain good of Yeats' metaphors, the labor of the poetic process, the curse and blessing of the poetic dance let us cling to all the fine things: how art and nature are inseparable; how art keeps us pursuing answers to our existential riddle; and how, ultimately, we rise, because of art, from our dark caverns into light"--Jacket.

Yeats and the Visual Arts

Yeats and the Visual Arts
Author: Elizabeth Bergmann Loizeaux
Publisher: Syracuse University Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2003-03-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780815629955

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This beautifully illustrated book traces W. B. Yeats's fascination with the visual arts from his early years, which were strongly influenced by his father's paintings and the Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood, to his celebration in his old age of Greek sculpture, Byzantine mosaics, and Michaelangelo's art.

The Cutting of an Agate

The Cutting of an Agate
Author: W. B. Yeats
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 127
Release: 2022-09-15
Genre: History
ISBN:

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This work contains essays concerning artistic criticism of plays, poetry, and paintings by W.B. Yeats, the Irish writer who is one of the central figures of 20th-century literature. He talked about these subjects reasonably, logically, and clearly.