ABSTRACT

This study addresses the problem of meaning as it is conveyed by poetic language, attempting to move beyond some of the obstacles and boundaries of contemporary critical approaches. By providing a phenomenological context, and through a theoretical contemplation of certain myths as embodiments of the tacit 'logic' of poetry, the book argues that poems convey meaning much the way that spontaneous unreadable gestures do. Moving between theory and practice, and drawing upon the poetry of Wallace Stevens whose work is embedded with a richness and complexity of gesture, the author shows how the poetic text sustains and embodies an inconvertible, ancient and innately human form of linguistic knowledge.

chapter Chapter One|20 pages

Can Beauty Hold a Plea?

Toward a Theory of Poetic Gesture

chapter Chapter Two|32 pages

Two Meditations

chapter Chapter Three|28 pages

The Necessary Angel

A Literal Body in a House of Words

chapter Chapter Four|26 pages

The Latent Double in the Word

Metonymy, Synecdoche, and the Gesture of Speech

chapter Chapter Five|42 pages

Whose Spirit is This?

The Touch of Thetis and the Poem's Gestural Context of Responsibility