Ode Consciousness

Ode Consciousness
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Artikel-Nr:
9781433107337
Veröffentl:
2009
Seiten:
261
Autor:
Robert Eisenhauer
Gewicht:
485 g
Format:
225x150x18 mm
Serie:
100, Studies on Themes and Motifs in Literature
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

The Author: Robert Eisenhauer received a Ph.D. in comparative literature and German from The Johns Hopkins University. Ode Consciousness is the eighth book he has published in the Studies on Themes and Motifs in Literature series; critical texts previously published include works on Ezra Pound, Henry James, Goethe, Shelley, Truman Capote, and Jean Paul. Eisenhauer is the author of three published collections of poetry: The Maya Railroad (1995), Winterrules (2005) and Fugues/Cartouches (2006). A collection of his photographs from travels in the United States and abroad was published as Sequences of Light.
Ode Consciousness examines a preeminent literary form in its three-thousand-year history, navigating between philosophy and literature, offering cross-cultural perspectives on a poetic logic informed by polar intensities of sensuous cognition. Making a double incision on the corpus, Robert Eisenhauer interprets works by Henry Vaughan and the modernist Frank O'Hara, foregrounding the text, but also the text(-ile) message, and the dialogical weave of enunciation. The ancient Chinese ode, translated by Karlgren and estranged by Pound, anchors sentience in the flora and fauna of physical nature, and the I Jing or Book of Changes offers insights on poetry, psychoanalysis, and aleatoriness per se.
The rise of the ode in the West is contemporary with that of a philosophical discourse concerning clarity and obscurity of thought. While Milton widens the esoteric scope, Lovelace concretizes ode consciousness through the image of a frozen grasshopper ("green ice"), whose non-longevity is contrasted with the human capacity for survival through friendship. Translating the "Polish Horace" (Sarbiewski), Coleridge prepares the ground for the lyricism of Keats and Shelley, raising the neural stakes through passages of lingering, delay, and intoxication. A negative capability inclusive of desire as well as nihilation inhabits Jalal al-Din Rumi and the Arabic qasida.
Affliction, a key concept for the Baroque, is discussed in the context of film noir, while Hegel's privileging in the Aesthetics of Schiller's "Song of the Bell" is seen as part of a larger attempt to censure the radical re-Pindarization and revolutionary retexting of the ode, most notably in Klopstock and Hölderlin. The author analyzes the role played by impersonality in Yeats's attempt to recrystallize Keatsian and Confucian sensibility through "annotated seeing" and the opening of windows of clairvoyant perception. Eisenhauer also suggests parallels between O'Hara's autumnal glimpses of New York City at the height of modernism and Keatsian sensibility. Ode Consciousness concludes by examining the return of the repressed in the graphic novels of Osamu Tezuka, thereby enriching our understanding of the ode's perennial relevance.
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