Imageless Truths: Shelley's Poetic FictionsUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 2016 M11 11 - 248 pages In Imageless Truths, Karen A. Weisman offers a new reading of Shelley's work in the context of the poet's changing constructions of poetic fictions. Shelley's understanding of language in general, and of the fictions and their rhetorical trope in particular, evolved throughout his career, and Weisman argues that it is in his self-consciousness over these transformations that we can find the primary motivating factor in the poet's philosophical and literary development. |
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... figurative language , and the emerging notion - forged variously and within various qualifications - that the language of imagination partici- pates in a reciprocal relationship with the life of truth.5 Furthermore , con- comitant with ...
... figurative lan- guage . From Plato's famous criminalizations of the mimetic function of art , to Locke's warning that the confounding of metaphor with concrete reality is a form of insanity , and on to Rousseau's correlations of ...
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Contents
1 | |
10 | |
2 The Awful Shadow of Some Unseen Power | 39 |
3 The Language of the Dead | 71 |
4 Sweetest Songs That Tell of Saddest Thought | 113 |
5 With More Than Truth Exprest | 147 |
Notes | 179 |
Bibliography | 213 |
Index | 225 |