Romantic Poets and the Laughter of Feeling
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 7 May 2024
- ISBN 9780198894766
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages272 pages
- Size 240x165x20 mm
- Weight 572 g
- Language English 560
Categories
Short description:
Romantic Poets and the Laughter of Feeling embraces the sublime and the ridiculous to offer a compelling new reading of British Romanticism. Matthew Ward reveals the decisive role laughter and the laughable play in Romantic aesthetics, emotions, and ethics.
MoreLong description:
The Romantic period witnessed decisive interest in how feeling might align with forms of artistic expression. Many critical studies have focused on the serious side and melancholic moods of Romantic poets. Romantic Poets and the Laughter of Feeling instead embraces the sublime and the ridiculous to offer an original and compelling new reading of British Romanticism. It reveals the decisive role laughter and the laughable play in Romantic aesthetics, emotions, and ethics.
Matthew Ward shows that laughter was one of the primary means by which Romantics embraced and expanded upon, but also frequently aped and lampooned, sympathetic feeling. The laughter of feeling is both the expression of sympathy and an articulation of its implications, prejudices, and constraints. For Romantic poets like Wordsworth, Shelley, and Keats, the sound of laughter carries the hope that greater knowledge of others derives from feeling for and with them through poetry, and this might lead to a better understanding of oneself. Yet laughter also makes these poets acutely aware that our emotional lives are utterly unfamiliar and perhaps ultimately unknowable. Their prosody of laughter enlivens and exposes; it embodies their sense of—and ambitions for—poetry, and yet calls those matters into the most comical and gravest doubt. Laughter helps define what it is to be human. This book shows that it also defines what it is to be a 'Romantic' poet.
Ward explores the complexity and contradictions of laughter, demonstrating "the vital importance of laughter to Romantic emotions, affect, and poetic self-fashioning". In particular, he reveals the laughter of feeling as the means by which Romantics both articulated and questioned the concept of sympathy.
Table of Contents:
Abbreviations
A Note on the Texts
Introduction
PART ONE ON LAUGHTER
Laughter Means Sympathy?
An Incongruous Pair: A Romantic Sense of Humour and the Poetic Imagination
PART TWO ON LAUGHING POETS AND POETICS
Wordsworth's Laughing Company
Shelley's Poetic Measures and Laughing Pleasures
Keats's Melodious Chuckle
Coda: Byron's Last Laugh
Selected Bibliography
Index