Wordsworth's scriptural topographies

<p>In 1963, M.H. Abrams suggested that the ultimate source of Wordsworth's poetry is the Bible, and, in particular, the New Testament. This thesis, however, demonstrates the importance of the Old Testament and offers the first extended analysis of Wordsworth's use of Old Testament rh...

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Main Author: Frodyma, JJJ
Other Authors: Stafford, F
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
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author Frodyma, JJJ
author2 Stafford, F
author_facet Stafford, F
Frodyma, JJJ
author_sort Frodyma, JJJ
collection OXFORD
description <p>In 1963, M.H. Abrams suggested that the ultimate source of Wordsworth's poetry is the Bible, and, in particular, the New Testament. This thesis, however, demonstrates the importance of the Old Testament and offers the first extended analysis of Wordsworth's use of Old Testament rhetoric. It examines both his affectionate perceptions of the natural world, and the Biblical recollections that saturate his writing. The purpose is to align two critical discourses - on Scripture and topography - and in doing so, situate Wordsworth's sense of himself as a poet-prophet in both Britain and America.</p> <p>The four chapters are structured topographically (Dwelling, Vales, Mountains, Rivers), and organised around a phenomenological experience of lived space, as expressed in key poems. Close analysis of Wordsworth's poetic language from <em>Descriptive Sketches</em> to <em>Yarrow Revisited</em> reveals the influence of the Bible (and the recent analysis of sacred Hebrew poetry undertaken by Lowth), while the theories of Heidegger and Bachelard provide a conceptual approach to Wordsworth's investment in nature. The epilogue opens questions of Wordsworth's reception in America by exploring the awareness of cultural and physical geography and sense of Wordsworth's prophetic ministry amongst his heirs. The thesis concludes that Wordsworth's extensive recourse to scriptural language and the physical landscape strengthened his claim to be a Prophet of Nature. His poetry self-consciously adopted the universal 'language of men' - that of the King James Bible.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:113ea195-dd48-4cbc-b26e-6572989392d62024-12-01T13:36:42ZWordsworth's scriptural topographiesThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:113ea195-dd48-4cbc-b26e-6572989392d6GeographyEnglish Language and LiteratureBiblical studiesEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Frodyma, JJJStafford, F<p>In 1963, M.H. Abrams suggested that the ultimate source of Wordsworth's poetry is the Bible, and, in particular, the New Testament. This thesis, however, demonstrates the importance of the Old Testament and offers the first extended analysis of Wordsworth's use of Old Testament rhetoric. It examines both his affectionate perceptions of the natural world, and the Biblical recollections that saturate his writing. The purpose is to align two critical discourses - on Scripture and topography - and in doing so, situate Wordsworth's sense of himself as a poet-prophet in both Britain and America.</p> <p>The four chapters are structured topographically (Dwelling, Vales, Mountains, Rivers), and organised around a phenomenological experience of lived space, as expressed in key poems. Close analysis of Wordsworth's poetic language from <em>Descriptive Sketches</em> to <em>Yarrow Revisited</em> reveals the influence of the Bible (and the recent analysis of sacred Hebrew poetry undertaken by Lowth), while the theories of Heidegger and Bachelard provide a conceptual approach to Wordsworth's investment in nature. The epilogue opens questions of Wordsworth's reception in America by exploring the awareness of cultural and physical geography and sense of Wordsworth's prophetic ministry amongst his heirs. The thesis concludes that Wordsworth's extensive recourse to scriptural language and the physical landscape strengthened his claim to be a Prophet of Nature. His poetry self-consciously adopted the universal 'language of men' - that of the King James Bible.</p>
spellingShingle Geography
English Language and Literature
Biblical studies
Frodyma, JJJ
Wordsworth's scriptural topographies
title Wordsworth's scriptural topographies
title_full Wordsworth's scriptural topographies
title_fullStr Wordsworth's scriptural topographies
title_full_unstemmed Wordsworth's scriptural topographies
title_short Wordsworth's scriptural topographies
title_sort wordsworth s scriptural topographies
topic Geography
English Language and Literature
Biblical studies
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