Approaching Authority: Transpersonal Gestures in the Poetry of Yeats, Eliot, and WilliamsThis study, using the example of Yeats, Eliot, and Williams, examines the principal gestures of Modernist poetic speakers attempting to identify, mediate, and project cultural authority. To effect this mediation, the poetic speakers must engage in "transpersonality"; by association with the objects of presences in the poem, they must translate their finite egos into mediating voices detached from the concerns of unique selfhood. However, complete transpersonality brings silence: the fact of utterance presupposes a unique perspective, never the totality of perspectives that an atemporal authority possesses. So, rather than the speaker's elevation to a position of authority, the necessary result of the transpersonality is instead that the speaker approach authority in calculated acts of mystification. |
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Page 123
... idea coalesce in the idea of timelessness in time , which also can be enacted only on the figurative level . The figurative implies a concrete and temporal reference to a continuous and atemporal form or concept , just as the ego is a ...
... idea coalesce in the idea of timelessness in time , which also can be enacted only on the figurative level . The figurative implies a concrete and temporal reference to a continuous and atemporal form or concept , just as the ego is a ...
Page 145
... idea to intersect , thus granting cultural authority to the art generated from it : ' Look at your feet and you will know what is actual and at the same time universal , that you exist , the universal in the particular . . . . It is in ...
... idea to intersect , thus granting cultural authority to the art generated from it : ' Look at your feet and you will know what is actual and at the same time universal , that you exist , the universal in the particular . . . . It is in ...
Page 221
... idea of an individual transformed by the role he occupies , we may be reminded of Max Weber's theory of charismatic ... idea or thing over word . . . . [ Rather ] , that there are no ideas unrealized and thus no thing except in the ...
... idea of an individual transformed by the role he occupies , we may be reminded of Max Weber's theory of charismatic ... idea or thing over word . . . . [ Rather ] , that there are no ideas unrealized and thus no thing except in the ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 7 |
Logos and Ego | 44 |
Egocentered Authority | 72 |
Copyright | |
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abstract actual archetypal argues assert authenticity authority to mediate Book Burnt Norton centered authority claims co-extensive authority consciousness consequence create creative Cress cultural authority death descent desire display divine Dry Salvages East Coker effort ego and Logos ego-centered authority ego's Eliot empirical exist experience expressed failure figurative level Four Quartets gestures Hanrahan hieratic homologous human idea ideal identify identity images imagination individual inevitable interpretive invocation language Little Gidding Logos-centered authority Mary Hynes meaning mind mind's modern modernist movement Nature objective world passage Paterson perceived perception poem poem's poet poet's poetic authority poetic speaker poetry position presence pride prior projected reader purpose reading reality relationship reorientation rhetorical role Romantic Romantic poetry self-consciousness self's sense speaker's authority speaking ego structure T.S. Eliot temporal authority textual voice thority tion tradition transpersonal University Press vision W. B. Yeats William Carlos Williams Williams's Yeats Yeats's younger