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John Donne and the Line of Wit

Author Paul Stanwood
Publisher Ronsdale Press
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Book Details
Author(s)Paul Stanwood
ISBN / ASIN1553800656
ISBN-139781553800651
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank5,131,441
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

John Donne and the Line of Wit: From Metaphysical to Modernist is a study of influence, adaptation, and historical imitation and invention. In his own time, Donne was celebrated for his distinctive style, especially for what his contemporaries recognized as “strong lines, ” that is, witty conceits or unusual, often unexpected and surprising comparisons. His imitators seldom managed to write with similar success. Donne’s “metaphysical wit” fell out of fashion in the later seventeenth century, not to be significantly explored and revived until the early twentieth century, and then notably by the modernist movement in the years that followed Eliot’s Waste Land (1922). Among the most important — and earliest — of poets and critics to respond to this movement are the self-styled Fugitives of the southern United States. As “fugitives” they stood against what seemed old and shop-worn language, and they gave their name and talent to the literary journal published at Vanderbilt University from 1922Äì25: The Fugitive provided an outlet for the work of John Crowe Ransom, Robert Penn Warren, Allen Tate, and others, who discovered a “new” modernism that might be shaped out of the “old” metaphysical mode of Donne.