Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York, NY
"Today it goes without saying that any and all aspects of life are open to poets to write about. In the middle of the nineteenth century, however, the proper subject matter for poetry was a controversial question. Should poets turn to the more...
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"Today it goes without saying that any and all aspects of life are open to poets to write about. In the middle of the nineteenth century, however, the proper subject matter for poetry was a controversial question. Should poets turn to the more congenial, more heroic, more malleable past for their materials, leaving the field of the present clear for the upstart novel? Or was it their duty to tackle their own age, to reconcile its ugliness and chaos and banality with the beauty and order of poetry? This first full-length study of an experimental, influential, and very diverse mid-Victorian school of poetry traces a number of family resemblances between long poems of the period that, combining elements of the novel and the epic to form new generic hybrids, each take up the gauntlet of representing 'unpoetical' modern, everyday life poetically"--
Includes bibliographical references and index. - Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction: A Poem of the Age -- 1. The Modern and the Everyday -- 2. The Long Narrative Poem -- 3. The Marriage Plot -- 4. The Uses of Genre -- Ends -- Postscript: Finding a form for modern love