Reading Swift's Poetry
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:13th Aug '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book explicates Jonathan Swift's poetry, reaffirming its prominence in competing literary traditions.
The first of its kind since 1988, this book is the most extensive study of Swift's poetry yet, as it examines dozens of poems written over a long career, from the early 1690s to the late 1730s, along with the works of other authors.Poets are makers, etymologically speaking. In practice, they are also thieves. Over a long career, from the early 1690s to the late 1730s, Jonathan Swift thrived on a creative tension between original poetry-making and the filching of familiar material from the poetic archive. The most extensive study of Swift's verse to appear in more than thirty years, Reading Swift's Poetry offers detailed readings of dozens of major poems, as well as neglected and recently recovered pieces. This book reaffirms Swift's prominence in competing literary traditions as diverse as the pastoral and the political, the metaphysical and the satirical, and demonstrates the persistence of unlikely literary tropes across his multifaceted career. Daniel Cook also considers the audacious ways in which Swift engages with Juvenal's satires, Horace's epistles, Milton's epics, Cowley's odes, and an astonishing array of other canonical and forgotten writers.
'… deeply learned and scholarly … deserves a wide audience beyond eighteenth-century studies.' Claude Willan, Eighteenth-Century Studies
ISBN: 9781108840958
Dimensions: 150mm x 235mm x 25mm
Weight: 610g
264 pages