Keats and the Holocaust: Notes towards a post-temporalism


Autoria(s): Grovier, Noyes Keller
Contribuinte(s)

Department of English and Creative Writing

Data(s)

12/11/2008

12/11/2008

2003

Resumo

Grovier, Kelly, 'Keats and the Holocaust: Notes towards a post-temporalism', Literature and Theology (2003) 17 (4) pp.361-373 RAE2008

This article begins by asking what it means for meaning to exist in literature. As an answer to this question, it is suggested that meaning is never wholly present, never immanent, but is endlessly emergent?always, as it were, imminent. In the light of this proposition, it is argued that critical preoccupation either with deliberate literary allusion on the one hand, or with unintentional historical elision on the other, as the basis for establishing existing meaning within a text, is misguided. Our determination to locate allusions and elisions is based on the supposition that meaning is principally to be traced back to events, enunciations, and anxieties occurring in the past. But after summoning and modifying emphases of Meister Eckhart, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and T.S. Eliot, it is suggested that the meaning of a given work may be as significantly shaped by the introduction into the tradition of subsequent texts as by the excavation of earlier ones. As illustration, the article considers the unexpectedly impressionable nature of John Keats's ode ?To Autumn? when read in the presence of the powerful elegy that Geoffrey Hill composed nearly a century and a half later, ?September Song?.

Peer reviewed

Formato

13

Identificador

Grovier , N K 2003 , ' Keats and the Holocaust: Notes towards a post-temporalism ' Literature and Theology , vol 17 , no. 4 , pp. 361-373 . DOI: 10.1093/litthe/17.4.361

0269-1205

PURE: 84253

PURE UUID: 4cd572bf-2fe8-4bcb-8816-fb500aef0de8

dspace: 2160/1065

http://hdl.handle.net/2160/1065

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/litthe/17.4.361

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

Literature and Theology

Tipo

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontojournal/article

Direitos