ABSTRACT

A salient feature of modern poetics is its direct connection with cultural history and politics. Among the great American poets of the twentieth century, Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams offer a significant contrast with T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound. Where the latter advocated a theocentric or reactionary response to the cultural crises of modernity, the former affirmed an essentially humanist and democratic social and aesthetic ethos. In Poetry, Politics, and Culture, Harold Kaplan offers a penetrating comparative study of these representative and distinctively influential poets.All four poets wrote in an atmosphere of cultural crisis following World War I, caught as they were between outmoded belief systems and various forms of artistic and political nihilism. While each believed in poetry as a source of cultural values and beliefs, they nevertheless experienced loss of confidence in their own vocation in a world characterized by scientific, rationalist thinking and the mundane struggle for survival. For each, therefore, the poetic imagination was a means of restoring order, or building a new civilization out of chaos. In trying to define a revitalized culture, the four exemplified the perennial quarrel between Europe and America.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction and Argument

part 1|80 pages

Eliot and Pound: Dissociations of Sensibility and Power

chapter 2|8 pages

Dissociations, Natural and Supernatural

chapter 3|10 pages

“The Silhouette of Man”

chapter 4|10 pages

Purgatory and Apocalypse

chapter 5|10 pages

A Problem of Order

chapter 6|10 pages

The Old Sublime

chapter 7|12 pages

The Vortex of Art

chapter 8|8 pages

Esthetic Politics

chapter 9|10 pages

Prejudice and Abstraction

part 2|112 pages

Stevens and Williams: The Source of Poetry

chapter 10|12 pages

“A Confidence in the World”

chapter 11|16 pages

“A Malady of the Quotidian”

chapter 12|20 pages

The Necessary Angel of Reality

chapter 13|18 pages

The Imagination as Value

chapter 14|10 pages

The Dehumanization of Art

chapter 15|12 pages

“The City as a Man”

chapter 16|10 pages

“A Peculiar Majesty”

chapter 17|12 pages

The Sign and Presence of the Human

part 3|48 pages

Poetry and Politics

chapter 18|22 pages

Cultural and Humanist Poetics

chapter 19|24 pages

Poetry, Culture, and Politics