John Donne And Contemporary Poetry


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John Donne and Contemporary Poetry


John Donne and Contemporary Poetry

Author: Judith Scherer Herz

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2017-09-18


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This collection of poems and essays by both poets and scholars explores how John Donne’s writing has entered into the language, the imagination, and the navigation of erotic and spiritual desires and experiences of twentieth- and twenty-first-century writers. The chapters chart a winding path from a description of the Donne and Contemporary Poetry Project at Fordham University to an encounter with the Holy Sonnets to a set of modern holy sonnets and then through the work of a poet who used Donne’s Devotions on Emergent Occasions to chart his own dying. There are further poems on sickness and recovery, an essay on Donne and disease that brings in the work of an Australian poet, and several chapters of poems with various Donnean echoes. Of the final four chapters, one places Donne in relation to another poet and one to the Psalms, followed by two chapters on Donne’s speech figures and his poetics.

John Donne and the Metaphysical Poets


John Donne and the Metaphysical Poets

Author: Harold Bloom

language: en

Publisher: Infobase Publishing

Release Date: 2010


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Presents a collection of critical essays about the works of John Donne and other metaphysical poets.

The Complete English Poems


The Complete English Poems

Author: John Donne

language: en

Publisher: Penguin UK

Release Date: 2004-06-24


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No poet has been more wilfully contradictory than John Donne, whose works forge unforgettable connections between extremes of passion and mental energy. From satire to tender elegy, from sacred devotion to lust, he conveys an astonishing range of emotions and poetic moods. Constant in his work, however, is an intensity of feeling and expression and complexity of argument that is as evident in religious meditations such as 'Good Friday 1613. Riding Westward' as it is in secular love poems such as 'The Sun Rising' or 'The Flea'. 'The intricacy and subtlety of his imagination are the length and depth of the furrow made by his passion,' wrote Yeats, pinpointing the unique genius of a poet who combined ardour and intellect in equal measure.