Originally published in 1992. What, in apparently pictorial poetry, do words represent? Conversely, how can words in a poem be picturable? Murray Krieger develops a systematic theoretical statement out of answers to such questions. Ekphrasis is his account of the continuing debates over meaning in language from Plato to the present. Krieger sees the modernist position as the logical outcome of these debates but argues that more recent theories radically question the political and aesthetic assumptions of the modernists and the two-thousand-year tradition they claim to culminate. Krieger focuses on ekphrasis-the literary representation of visual art, real or imaginary-a form at least as old as its most famous example, the shield of Achilles verbally invented in the Iliad. He argues that the "ekphrastic principle" has remained enduringly problematic in that it reflects the resistant paradoxes of representation in words. As he examines the conflict between the spatial and temporal, between vision-centered and word-centered metaphors, Krieger reveals how literary theory has been shaped by the attempts and the deceptive failures of language to do the job of the "natural sign."
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Since he published his wonderful 1967 essay on ekphrasis, or the literary depiction of visual art, Krieger has been wrestling with the larger implications of the genre for a theory of how it manifests itself. In this thoughtful and thought-provoking book, he forcefully grapples with the ancient paradox that words in time can seem to create images in space.
-Virginia Quarterly Review
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Für Beruf und Forschung
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-8018-4266-5 (9780801842665)
DOI
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Murray Krieger is University Professor of English at the University of California, Irvine. He is the author of A Reopening of Closure: Organicism against Itself and Words about Words about Words: Theory, Criticism, and the Literary Text, the latter available from Johns Hopkins University Press.
Acknowledgments
Foreword: Of Shields
Chapter 1. Picture and Word, Space and Time: The Exhilaration - and Exasperation - of Ekphrasis as a Subject
Chapter 2. Representation as Illusion: Dramatic Representation and the Natural-Sign Aesthetic
Chapter 3. Representation as Enargeia I: Verbal Representation and the Natural-Sign Aesthetic
Chapter 4. Representation as Enargeia II: Nature's Transcendence of the Natural Sign
Chapter 5. The Verbal Emblem I: The Renaissance
Chapter 6. Language as Aesthetic Material
Chapter 7. The Verbal Emblem II: From Romanticism to Modernism
Chapter 8. A Postmodern Retrospect: Semiotic Desire, Repression in the Name of Nature, and a Space for the Ekphrastic
Appendix: Ekphrasis and the Still Movement of Poetry; or Laokooen Revisited (1967)
Index