
This Project Contributes To The Fields Of Lyric Poetry And Poetics (especially Poetic Form), Aesthetics, And German Literature By Intervening In Debates On The Social Functions, Cognitive And Emotional Effects, And Value Of Poetry. It Builds On And Moves Beyond Previous Theories Of Rhythm To Tie Meter More Particularly To The Specificities Of Poetic Language In Blending Of Embodied Responses, Cultural Situations, And Linguistic Particularities. The Project Examines The German-language Tradition Across Three Centuries, Arguing That The Interdisciplinarity And Richness Of Metrical Theory And Practice Emerge In The Heterogeneity Of Poetry And Its Defenders In Their Specific Historical Moments. Focusing On Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock, Friedrich Nietzsche, And Durs Grünbein, The Book Contextualizes Each In The Metrical And Aesthetic Debates Of His Epoch, Showing How Questions Of Meter Are Linked With Overarching Poetic Goals Such As The Relationship Between Form And Meaning, The Adaptation Of The Classical Past For German Literature, And The Ways Poetry's Sounds Work In The Body. It Argues That Klopstock's, Nietzsche's, And Grünbein's Metrical Theory And Practice Offer Valuable Insights For Thinking About The Ways Poetry Works And Why It Matters-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates how metrical theory and practice function as a bridge between linguistic structure, embodied cognitive response, and historical cultural contexts. Hannah Vandegrift Eldridge draws upon her expertise in German literature and poetics to argue that meter is not merely a formal constraint but a dynamic site where meaning, sound, and historical intent converge. By analyzing the work of three distinct German poets, she demonstrates that metrical choices are deeply embedded in the aesthetic and social debates of their respective eras.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of poetics recognize this work as a rigorous contribution to the study of formal verse and its cognitive implications. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for an audience familiar with German literary history and aesthetic theory.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
New York : OUP,
ISBN-10:
0192675303
ISBN-13:
9780192675309
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