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Print Material
Author Attridge, Derek, author.

Title Moving words : forms of English poetry / Derek Attridge.

Publication Info. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2013.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 2nd Floor Stacks  821.009 At86m 2013    ---  Available
1 copy being processed for Axe Acquisitions Order.
Edition First edition.
Description viii, 244 pages ; 23 cm
text rdacontent
unmediated rdamedia
volume rdacarrier
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 224-237) and index.
Contents Introduction : against abstraction -- Part 1. Formal questions -- A return to form? -- Meaning in movement : phrasing and repetition -- Rhyme in English and French : the problem of the dramatic couplet -- Sounds and sense in lyric poetry -- Part II. Rhythm and metre -- Rhythm in English poetry : beat prosody -- Rhythm and interpretation : the iambic pentameter -- An enduring form : the English dolnik -- Lexical inventiveness and metrical patterns : beats and Keats -- Poetery unbound? : observations on free verse -- Appendix : scansion symbols -- Bibliography -- Index.
Summary "The contemporary reader of English poetry is able to take pleasure in the sounds and movements of the English language in works written over the past eight centuries, and to find poems that convey powerful emotions and vivid images from this entire period. This book investigates the ways in which poets have exploited the resources of the language as a spoken medium - its characteristic rhythms, its phonetic qualities, its deployment of syntax - to write verse that continues to move and delight. The chapters in the first of the two parts examine a number of issues relating to poetic form: the resurgence of interest in formal questions in recent years, the role of syntactic phrasing in the operation of poetry, the function of rhyme, and the relation between sound and sense. The second part is concerned with rhythm and metre, explaining and demonstrating 'beat prosody' as a tool of poetic analysis, and discussing three major traditions in English versification: the free four-beat form used in much popular verse, the controlled power of the iambic pentameter, and the twentieth-century invention of free verse." -- Publisher website.
Subject English poetry -- History and criticism.
English language -- Rhythm.
Sound in literature.
English language -- Rhythm. (OCoLC)fst00911625
English poetry. (OCoLC)fst00912278
Sound in literature. (OCoLC)fst01127004
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc. (OCoLC)fst01411635
ISBN 9780199681242 (hbk.)
0199681244 (hbk.)
9780198728115 (pbk.)
0198728115 (pbk.)

 
    
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