Introduction
1 Empson and Present-Day Criticism: a Chapter of Misunderstandings
Poet and critic: a change of heart?
The rational motive: Empson and the literature of conflict
2 ‘Beyond Formalism’: Pastoral and the ‘Subjective Correlative’
History and form in Pastoral: the ‘timeless prison’ of Symbolism
3 Complex Words and the Grammar of Motives
Dramatic ‘character’ and the commonsense ethic
4 Semantics and Historical Method: the Phenomenology of Meaning
Structures and meaning: the limits explanation
Ordinary language and semantic history
Complex Words and the ‘renaissance’ view of man
5 ‘Other Minds’: the Morality of Knowledge
Milton’s God and the ‘question of intention’
Milton, Pastoral and the levels of consciousness
Poetry and narrative: the ‘plot’ dimension
The rational bias: some limiting cases in Empson’s criticism
6 Literary ‘Values’ and Modern Humanism: Empson’s Work in Perspective
Alternative wisdoms: Empson between two cultures
Appendix: Complex Words and Recent Semantic Theory
Postscript by William Empson
Bibliographical Note
Notes
Index
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Christopher Norris is Distinguished Research Professor in Philosophy at the University of Cardiff, Wales. He is the author of numerous books on aspects of philosophy, critical theory, and modern intellectual history.