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The Rape of the Text
Harry M. Solomon
其他書名
Reading and Misreading Pope's Essay on Man
出版
University of Alabama Press
, 1993
主題
History / Social History
Literary Criticism / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Literary Criticism / Poetry
Literary Criticism / Renaissance
Literary Criticism / Subjects & Themes / General
Philosophy / History & Surveys / Modern
Poetry / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
ISBN
081730696X
9780817306960
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=klqFEFXnk0wC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
First published in 1733-1734,
An Essay on Man
, Alexander Pope's best-known philosophical poem, was highly praised by many of Pope's European contemporaries, including Voltaire, Rousseau, Kant, and Hume. The poem, divided into four Epistles, deals with the nature of man and his place in the universe, man as an individual, man in society, and man in pursuit of happiness.Voltaire called
An Essay on Man
"the most beautiful, most useful, most sublime didactic poem" in the English language, but what was formerly regarded as the pinnacle of 18th-century poetry now languishes largely unread or misread as a quaint period piece. In contrast, Harold Bloom recently described the
Essay
as a "poetic disaster" of "absurd theodicy."
The Rape of the Text
deconstructs the history of criticism for
An Essay on Man
to account for and to reverse over two hundred years of deformation and trivialization of Pope's text by literary critics, philosophers, and historians of ideas. After showing why the commonplaces about the
Essay
inscribed in Pope scholarship are suspect because of the mutual and abiding hostility of logocentric and aesthetic traditions of misreading, Solomon rebuts the objections made to Pope's "philosophy" in a series of chapters demonstrating more appropriate strategies for interpreting Pope's persona, tone, methodology, argument, and figurality. Cumulatively the chapters characterize a discourse work of "middle-state" Academic Skepticism that Pope shared with his admirers.Although the characterization of Pope's discourse world in
The Rape of the Text
has implications for Pope and for 18th-century scholarship beyond the
Essay on Man
, it also has implications for reading all philosophical poetry. Solomon contends that criticism of the
Essay on Man
is only an extreme example of the deformation that occurs routinely when literary critics or philosopher interpret philosophical poetry, and in the final chapter he calls for a "naturalization" of philosophical poetry as a genre as the necessary remedy to our present willful blindness.