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Modern ekphrasis / Emily Bilman.

Van Pelt Library PN56.E45 B55 2013
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Bilman, Emily.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Ekphrasis.
Art and literature.
Art, Modern--Philosophy.
Art, Modern.
Poetics.
Physical Description:
vi, 170 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 21 cm
Place of Publication:
Bern ; New York : Peter Lang, [2013].
Summary:
Modern Ekphrasis explores the analogical relations between modern poetry and painting in ekphrasis from Horace's mimetic "ut pictura poesis" tradition to Lessing's temporal/spatial antithesis, and the analogy's post-modern deconstruction with Derrida. The genesis of ekphrasis is demonstrated by close analytical readings of modern poems by Howard Nemerov, W.C. Williams, Sylvia Plath, and John Ashbery, mostly written on modern paintings by Paul Klee, Charles Demuth, Giorgio de Chirico, and Frank Stella. In an innovative approach, the author applies Anton Ehrenzweig's concept of "unconscious scanning" to a syncretic visualisation of Klee's Mountain Flora. Viewed with an undifferentiated depth vision that can fix the figure and background in a single glance, Mountain Flora acquires deeper verisimilitude. The self-reflexivity of the poems which comments on their creative processes and the interrelations of ekphrasis with cognition are analysed after the critical writings of Freud, Panowsky, Gombrich, Hagstrum, Arnheim, Steiner, Ehrenzweig, Derrida, and in the light of the latest neuroscientific discoveries. Homer's shield, Swift's tree, W.C. Williams' pot of flowers, and Ashbery's canvas create a suture within the ekphrastic poem in our imagination. This book demonstrates the evolution of literature and the humanities in our society from classicism to post-modernism which counteracted the self-alienation caused by our modern communication technology by inventing new socio-artistic circuits and new social identities. Book jacket.
Contents:
Chapter 1 The Genesis of Ekphrasis 15
I The Analogy between Poetry and Painting in Classical Antiquity 15
II G.E. Lessing's Distinction between the Spatial and the Temporal Arts in Laocoön and Modern Literary Criticism on the Issue 23
Chapter 2 The Interrelation of Modern Ekphrasis with Cognition, Perception, and Memory 35
Chapter 3 Temporal Movement Captured in Marcel Duchamp's Painting and X.J. Kennedy's Poem "Nude Descending A Staircase" 45
Chapter 4 A Poet's Dialogue with a Painter on Art: A. Cronin's Poem, "Lines for a Painter" and P. Swift's "Tree in Camden Town" 53
Chapter 5 Sylvia Plath's Subjective Reactionary Ekphrasis in "The Disquieting Muses" and Giorgio de Chirico's Painting of the Same Name 63
Chapter 6 Michael Hamburger's Poem, "A Painter Painted" and Lucien Freud's "Francis Bacon" 77
Chapter 7 The Spatio-Temporal Dimension of Literary Iconicity in W. C. Williams' "The Pot of Flowers" and Charles Demuth's "Tuberoses" 87
Chapter 8 A Semiotic Comparison between Linguistic and Pictorial Signs 105
Chapter 9 The Sign-Thing Interaction in Howard Nemerov's Poem "The Painter Dreaming in the Scholar's House", Paul Klee's "Mountain Flora" and Anton Ehrenzweig's "Unconscious Scanning'? 113
Chapter 10 The Seeds of Post-Modernism: Jacques Derrida, Frank Stella and John Ashbery's "The Painter" 131.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 167-169).
ISBN:
3034313632
9783034313636
OCLC:
829239271
Publisher Number:
99960497097

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