The rhetoric of the city : Robinson Jeffers and A.R. Ammons

Author(s)

    • Marcinkiewicz, Paweł

Bibliographic Information

The rhetoric of the city : Robinson Jeffers and A.R. Ammons

Paweł Marcinkiewicz

(Literary and cultural theory, v. 33)

P. Lang, c2009

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Originally presented as the author's thesis (doctoral--University of Opole)

Bibliography: [189]-198

Includes indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

There are many similarities in the development of urbanism and literature in the last two hundred years, resulting from a correspondence between modes of city-planning and modes of literary expression. The symbolic city, connected to the transcendental sphere of myth, evolved into the allegorical city that was transcendentally disconnected. In literature, initially there was no distinction between the symbol and allegory, but for nineteenth-century writers both were antithetical. Later, the symbol and allegory were merely ornaments, embodying a nostalgic drive for the unity of a subject and the products of its perception. Robinson Jeffers's poetry, like the early twentieth-century city, relies on the symbol while A. R. Ammons's poetry, like the late twentieth-century city, is allegorical in its essence. These similarities are not coincidental, but prove that the city and literature belong to the same socio-cultural sphere.

Table of Contents

Contents: Twentieth-century American poetry - Robinson Jeffers's poetry - A. R. Ammons's poetry - Aristotelian rhetoric - Contemporary usages of Aristotelian rhetoric and its pathos/ethos/logos - Development of city-planning and urbanism - Critical theories about the symbol and allegory - Contemporary theories about the city - Social aspects of citylife.

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