Eyes Wide Shut: Re-Envisioning Christina Rossetti’s Poetry and Prose - Melanie A Hanson - Books - ibidem-Verlag, Jessica Haunschild u Chri - 9783838203652 - May 1, 2012
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Eyes Wide Shut: Re-Envisioning Christina Rossetti’s Poetry and Prose

Melanie A Hanson

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Eyes Wide Shut: Re-Envisioning Christina Rossetti’s Poetry and Prose

Christina Rossetti's poetry and prose, written in 19th-century England, deals with the human fixation on appearance. Her belief in the Tractarian precepts of the Oxford Movement, primarily expostulated by John Keble and John Newman, transformed Rossetti's outlook on perception. Her association with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood also influenced her obsession with sight and insight. The focus of Melanie Hanson's study is the re-envisionment of Christina Rossetti's poetry and prose from three theoretical perspectives: deconstructionist theory, feminist literary theory, and Marxist literary criticism. The first part of her book explores Christina Rossetti's fascination with Plato's eye of the mind in The Allegory of the Cave. Rossetti believed that the physical eyes must be shut so that the eye of the mind could be wide open, creating in-sight. She connected the eye of the mind to her Tractarian religious beliefs. In her writings, the 'eye of the mind also relates to Eastern religious philosophy. The 'eye of the mind sees an alternate perception of reality. Rossetti was not only obsessed with the gaze and the object of the gaze in her writing, but she also re-fashioned John Milton's Eve from Paradise Lost into her own vision of Eve and the creation cycle in Rossetti's poetry and prose. Part 2 asserts that the author, Melanie Hanson, believes Rossetti's re-envisionment of the figure of Eve in Rossetti's writing contributes to the emergence of feminist literary criticism in the 20th century. Although Christina Rossetti was not a feminist, her poetry and prose have been examined by post-modern feminists concerning psychoanalytic and historic issues. Rossetti's envisionment of the consumed consumer is the subj


240 pages

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released May 1, 2012
ISBN13 9783838203652
Publishers ibidem-Verlag, Jessica Haunschild u Chri
Pages 240
Dimensions 151 × 256 × 11 mm   ·   180 g
Language German