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Sweet science : romantic materialism and the new logics of life / Amanda Jo Goldstein.

LIBRA PN751 .G65 2017
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Goldstein, Amanda Jo, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Blake, William, 1757-1827--Criticism and interpretation.
Blake, William.
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 1749-1832--Criticism and interpretation.
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 1792-1822. Masque of anarchy.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 1792-1822. Triumph of life.
Lucretius Carus, Titus--Influence.
Lucretius Carus, Titus.
Blake, William, 1757-1827.
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 1749-1832.
Masque of anarchy (Shelley, Percy Bysshe).
Triumph of life (Shelley, Percy Bysshe).
European literature--19th century--History and criticism.
European literature.
Romanticism.
Materialism in literature.
Literature and science.
Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.).
Criticism and interpretation.
Genre:
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Physical Description:
viii, 330 pages ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 2017.
Summary:
Today we do not expect poems to carry scientifically valid information. But it was not always so. In 'Sweet Science', Amanda Jo Goldstein returns to the beginnings of the division of labor between literature and science to recover a tradition of Romantic life writing for which poetry was a privileged technique of empirical inquiry. Goldstein puts apparently literary projects, such as William Blake's poetry of embryogenesis, Goethe's journals 'On Morphology', and Percy Shelley's "poetry of life," back into conversation with the openly poetic life sciences of Erasmus Darwin, J. G. Herder, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, and Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire. Such poetic sciences, Goldstein argues, share in reviving Lucretius's 'De rerum natura' to advance a view of biological life as neither self-organized nor autonomous, but rather dependent on the collaborative and symbolic processes that give it viable and recognizable form. They summon 'De rerum natura' for a logic of life resistant to the vitalist stress on self-authorizing power and to make a monumental case for poetry's role in the perception and communication of empirical realities. The first dedicated study of this mortal and materialist dimension of Romantic biopoetics, 'Sweet Science' opens a through-line between Enlightenment materialisms of nature and Marx's coming historical materialism.
Contents:
Introduction: "sweet science"
Blake's mundane egg: epigenesis and milieux
Equivocal life: Goethe's journals on morphology
Tender semiosis: reading Goethe with Lucretius and Paul de Man
Growing old together: Lucretian materialism in Shelley's The triumph of life
A natural history of violence: allegory and atomism in Shelley's The mask of anarchy
Coda: old materialism, or romantic Marx.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9780226458441
022645844X
9780226484709
022648470X
OCLC:
958780041

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