The American landscape in the poetry of Frost, Bishop, and Ashbery The house abandoned /

A remarkably engaging work of literary analysis, this book employs biography and cultural history to explore the scene of the abandoned house in the lives and work of Frost, Bishop, and Ashbery.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Macarthur, Marit J.
Published:
Literature type: Electronic Software eBook
Language: English
Series: American literature readings in the twenty-first century
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230614116
Summary: A remarkably engaging work of literary analysis, this book employs biography and cultural history to explore the scene of the abandoned house in the lives and work of Frost, Bishop, and Ashbery.
"MacArthur's book is striking for its scrupulous research. She makes the figure of the abandoned house surprisingly resonant and timely. She gives new vitality to biography as an approach to poetry, in part because she eschews psychoanalysis for a more common-sense phenomenological approach that proves especially apposite and challenging in her approach to Ashbery's work." - Charles Altieri, Rachel Anderson Stageberg Chair of English, University of California, Berkeley "The eye is the first circle, Emerson declared. Americans are always on the move, pushing ahead toward new horizons. Yet modern American poetry is also strewn with abandoned houses, pulling us back into their stories and mysteries. MacArthur offers the first broad reading of this push-pull trope, showing its permutations in three of the twentieth-century's most important writers. The book blends fresh critical readings with original research into the biographies and landscapes of these poets, to remind us that the imagination finds its source and its renewal in experience." - Bonnie Costello, Professor, Boston University and author of Shifting Ground: Reinventing Landscape in Modern American Poetry "This attractive and interesting book speaks to our deep longing for home, and our nostalgia for what cannot be regained. MacArthur's study is focused on the poetry of Frost, Bishop, and Ashbery - three of our most compelling poets - but she casts a wider net, locating in the image of the abandoned house a kind of total symbol, one that pulls into its longings a sense of the consequences of historical patterns of American migration and casual exploitation of the nation's natural resources. This beautifully written book should attract a wide audience beyond the usual boundaries of criticism." - Jay Parini, D. E. Axinn Professor of English and Creative Writing, Middlebury College.
Item Description: Ebook.
Originally published in: 2008.
Carrier Form: 272 p.
ISBN: 9780230603226
9780230614116 :
0230614116 :
CLC: I11
Contents: The House Abandoned * Robert Frost: "The Ruined Cottage" in America * Elizabeth Bishop: Incarnations of the "Crypto-Dream-House" * John Ashbery: The Farm on the Lake at the End of the Mind.