
In her study of two creative minds, Lucy Newlyn offers a startlingly new version of the poetic interaction between Coleridge and Wordsworth during the critical years from 1797 to 1807. Rejecting the traditional accounts, even those given by the poets themselves, which have minimized the differences between the two, Newlyn demonstrates that it is only on the most superficial level that each poet seemed to be the other's ideal audience. Below that surface, she insists, there were radical dissimilarities between the two which led to a kind of "creative" misunderstanding by which each artist clearly defined himself in relation to the other. Because it is in the poet's "private language" of allusion that these differences are most clearly seen, the book concludes that this "private language" spoken by artists amongst themselves may in fact be the most aggressive of literary forms.
This book investigates the complex, often adversarial nature of the creative relationship between Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth during their most productive decade. Lucy Newlyn, an established scholar in Romantic studies, challenges long-standing critical narratives that characterize the two poets as harmonious collaborators. By analyzing their private correspondence and poetic output, she argues that their interaction was defined by a productive, yet aggressive, misunderstanding that forced each poet to define his unique identity in opposition to the other.
What You Will Find
Scholars and students of Romanticism frequently cite this work for its rigorous challenge to traditional biographical accounts of the Wordsworth-Coleridge friendship. The text is noted for its dense, academic prose and its sophisticated application of literary theory to historical correspondence.
Page Count:
280
Publication Date:
2001-05-24
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199242593
ISBN-13:
9780199242597
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