Disowned by Ever-Turning Language: (Dis-)Placing Wordsworth’s Lucy in Context
Disowned by Ever-Turning Language: (Dis-)Placing Wordsworth’s Lucy in Context
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초록

The Lyrical Ballads of 1801 contains a lyric cycle known to us as Lucy poems. Although textually dispersed and inconsistent in fitting together to form a unified whole, each piece is marked by the reference to Lucy, of which the referent is ambiguous. This essay examines whether they make up a thematic unit, and if they do, what it is about, and how we can figure out Wordsworth’s poetic endeavors. Lucy provokes and eludes representation simultaneously, occupying a temporary node in a network of transferences and displacements. The narrator, however, does not merely represent Lucy’s absence but makes her absence through representation. Lucy might have nothing to reveal. But the lyric cycle successfully reveals the narrator’s passion for poetic representation, and Lucy embodies such passion.

키워드

WordsworthLucyLyrical Balladsfigureindecipherablesubstitutionmaterialitypassion
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Disowned by Ever-Turning Language: (Dis-)Placing Wordsworth’s Lucy in Context
제목 (타언어)
Disowned by Ever-Turning Language: (Dis-)Placing Wordsworth’s Lucy in Context
저자
주혁규
DOI
10.25151/nkje.2022.64.4.004
발행일
2022-11
저널명
새한영어영문학
64
4
페이지
71 ~ 96