Description

Book Synopsis
Examining various aesthetics of suspension in the works of nineteenth-century poets such as Coleridge, Shelley, Tennyson, and Christina Rossetti, Anne C. McCarthy shares important insights into the cultural fascination with the sublime.

Trade Review
"By carefully analyzing suspension, with its ‘constellation of meanings and images that gradually – if only through insistent repetition – take on increasingly general force' in the Romantic and early Victorian eras’, McCarthy considerably contributes to the overwhelming body of secondary scholarship on Romantic and Victorian literature." -- Sasha Tamar Strelitz * New Books on English and American Literature of the Nineteenth-Century *
"Awful Parenthesis is both ambitious and promising. It focuses and allows us to take a step forward in writing the history of an aesthetic that numerous studies see as pushing toward the future, something that reveals in the Romantics the seeds of the post-modern, perhaps the post-human." -- Deborah Weiss, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa * European Romantic Review *
"An outstanding book that hospitably accommodates the reader in its complexity and nuance even as it entertains with its elegant, shrewd, and frequently quick-witted exegeses of form." -- Emma Mason, University of Warwick * University of Toronto Quarterly: Letters in Canada 2018 *
"Awful Parenthesis presents a convincing case for re-theorizing the sublime by recognizing suspension as its condition of possibility." -- Kimberly Rodda, University of Toronto * University of Toronto Quarterly: Letters in Canada 2018 *
"Awful Parenthesis provides beautiful close readings of a range of poems, including an extended reading of Shelley’s Mont Blanc (1816). But this book’s most important contribution is not its treatment of particular poems or poets, but rather its moving […] consideration of the way life is lived in the face of contingency, and of the leap of faith such living requires." -- Casie LeGette, University of Georgia * Victorian Studies *

Table of Contents
Abbreviations Introduction - The Aesthetics of Suspension Chapter 1 - Coleridge, Suspension, and the Sublime Chapter 2 - Semblances of Truth in "Christabel" and Aids to Reflection Chapter 3 - The Aesthetics of Contingency in Shelley’s "Universe of Things" Chapter 4 - Tennyson and the Rhetoric of Suspended Animation Chapter 5 - Christina Rossetti’s Poetic Faith Bibliography

Awful Parenthesis

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A Hardback by Anne C. McCarthy

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    Publisher: University of Toronto Press
    Publication Date: 02/05/2018
    ISBN13: 9781487502911, 978-1487502911
    ISBN10: 1487502915

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Examining various aesthetics of suspension in the works of nineteenth-century poets such as Coleridge, Shelley, Tennyson, and Christina Rossetti, Anne C. McCarthy shares important insights into the cultural fascination with the sublime.

    Trade Review
    "By carefully analyzing suspension, with its ‘constellation of meanings and images that gradually – if only through insistent repetition – take on increasingly general force' in the Romantic and early Victorian eras’, McCarthy considerably contributes to the overwhelming body of secondary scholarship on Romantic and Victorian literature." -- Sasha Tamar Strelitz * New Books on English and American Literature of the Nineteenth-Century *
    "Awful Parenthesis is both ambitious and promising. It focuses and allows us to take a step forward in writing the history of an aesthetic that numerous studies see as pushing toward the future, something that reveals in the Romantics the seeds of the post-modern, perhaps the post-human." -- Deborah Weiss, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa * European Romantic Review *
    "An outstanding book that hospitably accommodates the reader in its complexity and nuance even as it entertains with its elegant, shrewd, and frequently quick-witted exegeses of form." -- Emma Mason, University of Warwick * University of Toronto Quarterly: Letters in Canada 2018 *
    "Awful Parenthesis presents a convincing case for re-theorizing the sublime by recognizing suspension as its condition of possibility." -- Kimberly Rodda, University of Toronto * University of Toronto Quarterly: Letters in Canada 2018 *
    "Awful Parenthesis provides beautiful close readings of a range of poems, including an extended reading of Shelley’s Mont Blanc (1816). But this book’s most important contribution is not its treatment of particular poems or poets, but rather its moving […] consideration of the way life is lived in the face of contingency, and of the leap of faith such living requires." -- Casie LeGette, University of Georgia * Victorian Studies *

    Table of Contents
    Abbreviations Introduction - The Aesthetics of Suspension Chapter 1 - Coleridge, Suspension, and the Sublime Chapter 2 - Semblances of Truth in "Christabel" and Aids to Reflection Chapter 3 - The Aesthetics of Contingency in Shelley’s "Universe of Things" Chapter 4 - Tennyson and the Rhetoric of Suspended Animation Chapter 5 - Christina Rossetti’s Poetic Faith Bibliography

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