Coleridge, form and symbol, or The ascertaining vision

Author(s)

    • Reid, Nicholas

Bibliographic Information

Coleridge, form and symbol, or The ascertaining vision

Nicholas Reid

(Nineteenth century series)

Ashgate, c2006

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [175]-184) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In his convincingly argued book, Nicholas Reid shows just how central Coleridge's theories of imagination, form, and symbol were to Coleridge's metaphysics. What distinguishes Reid's book is the admirable way he takes up the thorny issues of perception and image, and their relation to language, and makes successful use of both cognitive science and recent philosophical writings to show the continuing relevance of Coleridge's views. Reid draws on recent work in the theory of mind by Damasio, Lakoff, and others, and also goes back to the work of Susanne Langer and L. A. Reid, to demonstrate the centrality of concrete form for Coleridge, giving an integrated account of Coleridge's theory (including terms like 'symbol' and 'organic form') and also situating these central Coleridgean concerns within a contemporary realist and non-theistic aesthetic. In addition, he offers a clear account of Schelling's place in the development of Coleridge's thinking. Reid's interdisciplinary approach will make this book invaluable not only to Coleridge specialists but also to students and scholars concerned generally with the history of philosophy, psychology, religion, and literature.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Preface
  • Introduction. Part I Image and Form: 'That eternal language'
  • or why Coleridge was right about imaging and meaning
  • Form in Coleridge
  • and in perception and art. Part II Coleridge's Poetry: 'The Ancient Mariner'
  • The conversation poems
  • Coleridge, Akenside and the platonic tradition: reading in The Pleasures of Imagination. Part III Coleridgean Metaphysics: The transcendental deduction: Schelling, and Coleridge's response
  • The satanic principle in the later Coleridge's theory of imagination
  • Coleridge, Language and the imagination
  • Art and the medium: 'On poesy or art' and the 'essay on method'
  • Works cited
  • Index.

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