2016
DOI: 10.4324/9781315640266
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The Idea of Infancy in Nineteenth-Century British Poetry

Abstract: This book radically refigures the conceptual and formal significance of childhood in nineteenth-century English poetry. By theorizing infancy as a poetics as well as a space of continual beginning, Ruderman shows how it allowed poets access to inchoate, uncanny, and mutable forms of subjectivity and art. While recent historicist studies have documented the "freshness of experience" that childhood confers on nineteenth-century poetry and culture, this book draws on new formalist and psychoanalytic perspectives … Show more

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