BOOKS - Personification and the Sublime: Milton to Coleridge
Personification and the Sublime: Milton to Coleridge - Steven Knapp September 30, 1985 PDF  BOOKS
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Personification and the Sublime: Milton to Coleridge
Author: Steven Knapp
Year: September 30, 1985
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 11 MB
Language: English

Eighteenth-century and Romantic readers had a peculiar habit of calling personified abstractions and "sublime. and " This has always seemed mysterious, since the same readers so often expressed a feeling that there was something wrong with turning ideas into people - or, worse, turning people into ideas. In this wide-ranging, carefully argued study, Steven Knapp explains the connection between personification and the aesthetics of the sublime. Personifications, such as Milton's controversial figures of Sin and Death in Paradise Lost , were seen to embody a unique combination of imaginative power and overt fictionality, and these, Knapp shows, were exactly the conflicting requirements of the sublime in general. He argues that the uneasiness readers felt toward sublime personifications was symptomatic of broader ambivalences toward archaic beliefs, political and religious violence, and poetic fiction as such. Drawing on recent interpretations of Romanticism, allegory, and the sublime, Knapp provides important new readings of Coleridge, Wordsworth, Kant, and William Collins. His provocative thesis sheds new light on the relationship between Romanticism and the eighteenth century.

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