Shelley and the Apprehension of Life

Ross Wilson author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:15th Aug '13

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Shelley and the Apprehension of Life cover

This book establishes Percy Bysshe Shelley's view of poetry as 'living melody' and sets it within the wider context of Romantic-era thought.

Set within the wider context of Romantic poetry and the opposition between 'living' and 'embracing life', this book encompasses the whole range of Percy Bysshe Shelley's work, published and unpublished, to show that poetry is, for him, an art form that embodies the most basic questions of life.Percy Bysshe Shelley, in the essay 'On Life' (1819), stated 'We live on, and in living we lose the apprehension of life'. Ross Wilson uses this statement as a starting point to explore Shelley's fundamental beliefs about life and the significance of poetry. Drawing on a wide range of Shelley's own writing and on philosophical thinking from Plato to the present, this book offers a timely intervention in the debate about what Romantic poets understood by 'life'. For Shelley, it demonstrates poetry is emphatically 'living melody', which stands in resolute contrast to a world in which life does not live. Wilson argues that Shelley's concern with the opposition between 'living' and 'the apprehension of life' is fundamental to his work and lies at the heart of Romantic-era thought.

'To read a critic this sensitive to the language of another sensitive language-user is to be made aware of the texture of phrases that otherwise risk being overlooked.' The Times Literary Supplement
'… compelling, beautifully executed and, to use one of Wilson's key terms, profoundly animating …' Stuart Allen, The BARS Review

ISBN: 9781107041226

Dimensions: 236mm x 158mm x 18mm

Weight: 500g

241 pages