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The Imperial Dryden The Poetics of Appropriation in Seventeenth-Century England at Meripustak

The Imperial Dryden The Poetics of Appropriation in Seventeenth-Century England by David Bruce Kramer, University of Georgia Press

Books from same Author: David Bruce Kramer

Books from same Publisher: University of Georgia Press

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)David Bruce Kramer
    PublisherUniversity of Georgia Press
    ISBN9780820315430
    Pages192
    BindingHardcover
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearJanuary 2000

    Description

    University of Georgia Press The Imperial Dryden The Poetics of Appropriation in Seventeenth-Century England by David Bruce Kramer

    John Dryden (1631-1700) was the first great poet, observed W.J. Bate, to labour under "the burden of the past". Over the years, he read, wrote about, and adapted or translated an extraordinary number of European writers; these in turn formed the textual ground from which his own art emerged. In "The Imperial Dryden", David B. Kramer shows how Dryden used other writers' works "not to save himself the trouble of making but to make anew". Tracing the course of the poet's career, Kramer focuses first on Dryden's approach to the French poet and critic Pierre Corneille, who had developed a subversive strategy of "misquoting" his predecessors - a strategy Dryden soon learned to use against Corneille himself. He then explores Dryden's more open plundering of secondary French poets: this tactic constituted a kind of literary "imperialism" that echoed England's own imperial ambitions regarding foreign wealth. Finally, Kramer shows how, after the Revolution of 1688, Dryden's poetic persona shifted from that of plundering male to vulnerable neuter to, at moments, a disenfranchised female wishing to be seized and "impregnated" by the spirits of her great male predecessors. Kramer's study extends beyond the works of Dryden himself into several larger questions of literary history: the effect of dynastic changes and national revolutions upon poetic alliances and ruptures; the manner in which a poetic sensibility defines itself in concert with, and in opposition to, shifting groups of writers and schools; and the ways in which personal reverses may alter gender identification. Demonstrating how poets' relations with their predecessors can modulate from agonistic struggle to uneasy but productive truce, Kramer proposes a series of frameworks for discussing the effects of political and cultural circumstance upon poetic production. An original contribution to Dryden scholarship, this book should also attract any scholar interested in the relationship between authors and their literary forebears.



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