To read prose for spontaneity is to imaginatively experience prose being spontaneously rewritten. Ravinthiran models this experience delightfully, in a range of texts whose delights have been kept from literary criticism far too long.

Brian Gingrich, ALH Online Review

This study analyzes post-Romantic prose whose authors--in terms of race, gender, class, nationality, and more--occupy a range of subject-positions. Unlike poetry, modern literary prose has no rhetorical repertoire or structure (beyond those of grammar) that one could tabulate. As a result, it becomes a zone of experimentation and spontaneous creativity, as well as a means to investigate the concept of spontaneity, understood as post-secular. Heeding separate histories and peculiar particularities, this volume reveals writers discovering their ideas as they go, in prose whose sound, rhythm, syntax, and imagery escapes the preordained. There are chapters on William Hazlitt, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Walt Whitman (and Hindu philosophy), Gerard Manley Hopkins, Herman Melville, D.H. Lawrence and Saul Bellow, Virginia Woolf and Marion Milner, Gwendolyn Brooks, Adil Jussawalla, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. These writers are intelligently vexed by two transitions: first, the movement from impulse into form; and second, the overlap between literary forms and social forms. They explore the yearning for renovated societies which, expressive of our deepest selves, would also enable those selves--in times of panicked fragmentation, moral relativism, and communication imperiled--to interact as citizens.
Les mer
Studies the afterlife of the Romantic idea of spontaneity in transatlantic modern prose in the work of William Hazlitt, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Herman Melville, D.H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, and Saul Bellow, to provide a broad-based historical enquiry into what it means to read, write, and live as a modern person.
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1: Introduction 2: William Hazlitt's Spontaneous Journalism 3: The Crisis Prose of Emerson and Whitman: Hinduism, Convulsive Forms, and Moonlight 4: "In some spontaneous way, so to speak": The Journal-Prose of Gerard Manley Hopkins 5: Herman Melville's Heart and Billy Budd's Overflowing Soup 6: The Aesthetics of Outburst: D.H. Lawrence and Saul Bellow 7: Virginia Woolf, Marion Milner, Spontaneous Ordering Forces, and the Reclaiming of Gendered Passiveness 8: Reading Gwendolyn Brooks's Maud Martha, in the Meantime 9: Adil Jussawalla: The Journalist as Lyric Activist 10: Conclusion: Digital Spontaneity Today, and in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Americanah
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Vidyan Ravinthiran is Associate Professor of English Literature at Harvard and he is author of two award-winning books of verse. His first monograph, Elizabeth Bishop's Prosaic (Bucknell UP, 2015) won both the University English Prize and the Warren-Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism. He has compiled editions of Indian poets and has published a range of both scholarly and journalistic articles on the cognitions of form in both poetry and prose, encompassing works from multiple time-periods and nations. He helps organize Ledbury Emerging Critics, a UK/US scheme for increasing racial diversity in review-culture.
Les mer
A vivid analysis of prose style Breaks with periodization and national categories to compare a truly diverse and global range of authors Considers minoritized authors in terms of their aesthetic innovations Establishes terms and a sensibility for the future study of literary form as it overlaps with social forms
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198852155
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Vekt
564 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Vidyan Ravinthiran is Associate Professor of English Literature at Harvard and he is author of two award-winning books of verse. His first monograph, Elizabeth Bishop's Prosaic (Bucknell UP, 2015) won both the University English Prize and the Warren-Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism. He has compiled editions of Indian poets and has published a range of both scholarly and journalistic articles on the cognitions of form in both poetry and prose, encompassing works from multiple time-periods and nations. He helps organize Ledbury Emerging Critics, a UK/US scheme for increasing racial diversity in review-culture.