A Contradiction Still: Representations of Women in the Poetry of Alexander PopeManchester University Press, 1998 - 245 pages This text offers a critique of the views concerning gender and gender roles expressed or implied in Pope's poetry. Knellwolf approaches Pope's stylistic complexity revealing it as an effect of his engagement with a historical situation in which the position of women was one of the most prominent sources of ideological conflict. She provides a discussion of Pope's poetic language and relates it to the wider context of publication in which male writers defended the masculine privilege of literary authorship against intellectual women. |
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Page 89
... political one , the parallel of poetic and political kingdoms ' . ? Although he points to the political relevance of the act of judgement , Hotch himself does not pursue the political implications of the analogy between poetic and ...
... political one , the parallel of poetic and political kingdoms ' . ? Although he points to the political relevance of the act of judgement , Hotch himself does not pursue the political implications of the analogy between poetic and ...
Page 146
... political liberties by a papist prince'.23 When he traces this connection he ignores the complex and displaced charac- ter of ' rape ' and refuses to engage with the poem's sexual politics . It is fundamentally inconsistent that ...
... political liberties by a papist prince'.23 When he traces this connection he ignores the complex and displaced charac- ter of ' rape ' and refuses to engage with the poem's sexual politics . It is fundamentally inconsistent that ...
Page 207
... political implications in the phrase ' th ' Imperial seat of Fools ' ( 272 ) show the political perspective of female influence.20 At a later stage in the poem Dulness asks : ' O ! when shall rise a Monarch all our own , And I , a ...
... political implications in the phrase ' th ' Imperial seat of Fools ' ( 272 ) show the political perspective of female influence.20 At a later stage in the poem Dulness asks : ' O ! when shall rise a Monarch all our own , And I , a ...
Contents
Contradiction and the Epistle to a Lady | 10 |
Contradiction the double standard and its critics | 39 |
Violence and representation in WindsorForest | 67 |
Copyright | |
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aesthetic Alexander Pope ambiguity ambivalent Ambrose Philips analysis Aphra Behn argues argument Ariel artistic attitude behaviour Belinda Brean Hammond century character claim complex concerning contemporary context contradiction conventional couplet creativity Criticism culture demonstrates describes Dryden Dulness Dunciad eighteenth eighteenth-century Eliza Haywood Eloisa to Abelard Empson Epistle Essay Essay on Criticism example expression fact femininity feminism feminist figure gender Heloise human idea ideology implies important intellectual interpretation John Dryden Lady language Lauretis literary Lock logical London Lord Hervey male masculinity meaning metaphor mind mock-heroic moral narrative nature object Oxford particular passage pastoral performative contradiction physical poem poem's poet poetic political Pope's poetry position produces question Rape readers recognise reference relation representation rhetorical role satire says Scriblerian sense sexual social society stereotypes structure sylphs theory tion Umbriel understanding violence voice William Empson Windsor-Forest woman women