We Found Her Hidden

by Paul Hullah


Formats

Softcover
$30.75
E-Book
$4.99
Softcover
$30.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 16/7/2018

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 364
ISBN : 9781543746662
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 364
ISBN : 9781543746679

About the Book

This newly revised study examines thematic elements in Christina Rossetti’s poetry in order to celebrate and explain an important, undervalued writer and her remarkable artistic quest to achieve an original voice. Critics rightly applaud Rossetti’s metrical craftsmanship and song-like lyrical phrasings, but over-attention to formal felicities can impede proper interpretation of content. Through detailed readings of selected poems, this book demonstrates that Rossetti’s rigorously controlled use of language and innovative symbolism combine to create radical, ‘hidden’ inter-textual levels of meaning beyond those attainable via biographical decoding, making her a singular bridge between Romanticism and Modernism. From earliest ‘secular’ interactions with Romantic and Tractarian thought, through Goblin Market (1862) and The Prince’s Progress (1866), Rossetti’s verse resists straightforward interpretation by subtly interrogating and subverting the patriarchal traditions of writing that it simultaneously extends: love lyric, fairy tale, quest myth, and sonnet. Persuasively constructing a case for the inability of male-ordained poetics to cope with the expression of active female identity, Monna Innominata (1881) deconstructs lyric tradition, casting together medieval, renaissance, Romantic and Victorian ideologies. This groundbreaking sonnet cycle disturbs poetic conventions and forms the most concentrated, sustained demonstration of the struggle to articulate the female self to be found in Rossetti’s oeuvre, perhaps in literary history. The painful sense of irresolution and despair pervading Monna Innominata sheds important light upon Christina Rossetti’s exclusive production of devotional literature during her final years.


About the Author

Paul Hullah has published literary studies including Romanticism and Wild Places (Quadriga, 1998), Rock UK: A Sociocultural History of British Popular Music (Cengage, 2013), and seven collections of poetry, including Climbable (Partridge, 2016). He received the 2013 Asia Pacific Brand Laureate Award for ‘paramount contribution to the cultivation of literature’. He lives in Japan and is currently tenured Associate Professor of British Poetry at Meiji Gakuin University, Tokyo.