Philosophical Connections
Neoclassical and Romantic verse cultures are often assumed to sit in an oppositional relationship to one another, with the latter amounting to a hostile reaction against the former. But there are in fact a good deal of continuities between the two movements, ones that strike at the heart of the evolution of verse forms in the period. This Element proposes that the mid-eighteenth-century poet Mark Akenside, and his hugely influential Pleasures of Imagination, represent a case study in the deep connections between Neoclassicism and Romanticism. Akenside's poem offers a vital illustration of how verse was a rival to philosophy in the period, offering a new perspective on philosophic problems of appearance, or how the world 'seems to be'. What results from this is a poetic form of knowing: one that foregrounds feeling over fact, that connects Neoclassicism and Romanticism, and that Akenside called the imagination's 'pleasures'.
Product details
- Published: May 2022
- Format: Paperback
- ISBN: 9781009222976
- Length: 78 pages
- Dimensions: 228 × 151 × 5 mm
- Weight: 0.12kg
- Availability: Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction, or 'The Design'
- 1. Philosophic Backgrounds: Pope's Essay and Akenside
- 2. 'Appearances in the World Around Us': Akenside and the Way Things Seem to Be
- 3. 'There to read the transcript of Himself': Coleridge, Akenside, and the Esemplastic Imagination
- 4. Akenside's Romanticism: Wordsworth, Keats, and Imaginative Pleasures
- Conclusion: Things Connected.
- Show more