Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface: Among the Nightmare Lovers of Hades
- 1 Eliot as Revolutionary
- 2 Goethe and Modernism: The Dream of Anachronism in Goethe's Roman Elegies
- 3 Ezra Pound: The Solitary Volcano
- 4 Does Time Exist?
- 5 The Age of Authenticity: An American Poet in England
- 6 Whitman and Wilde in Camden
- 7 Dangerous Thoughts, Puzzling Responses
- 8 Scaling the Wall
- 9 Mass Death and Resurrection: Notes on Contemporary, Mostly American, Jewish Fiction
- 10 Rilke, Einstein, Freud and the Orpheus Mystery
- 11 Shrouds Aplenty (on poems of Janowitz, et al)
- 12 Ambushes of Amazement (on poems of Wakoski)
- 13 Dangerous and Steep (on poems of Jacobsen)
- 14 Small Touching Skill (on poems of Ponsot)
- 15 Language Mesh (on Paul Celan)
- 16 Sweet Extra (on poems of Cuddihy, Ray)
- 17 Maze of the Original (on translating poetry)
- 18 Approaching the Medieval Lyric
- 19 Dark Passage (on poems of Stafford)
- 20 Mistress of Sorrows (on Ingeborg Bachmann)
- 21 The Innocence of a Mirror (on poems of Oliver)
- 22 Peskily Written (on Sade)
- 23 Is There Sex after Sappho?
- 24 Saving One's Skin (on medieval poetry)
- 25 Brilliant White Shadow (on poems and prose of Saba)
- 26 Serpent's Tale (on Minoan archeology)
- 27 How Honest Was Cellini?
- 28 The Poetry of No Compromises (on poems of Rehder)
- 29 Assigning Names (on poems of Nurkse)
- 30 History and Ethics: Bruni's History of Florence
- 31 Virgil's Aeneid Made New (a translation by Robert Fagles)
- 32 Painting with Poetry (on the poems of Annie Boutelle)
- 33 Vampires and Freedom (on the work of Erik Butler)
- 34 How the West Learned to Read and Write: Silent Reading and the Invention of the Sonnet
- List of Publications
- Index
34 - How the West Learned to Read and Write: Silent Reading and the Invention of the Sonnet
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 April 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface: Among the Nightmare Lovers of Hades
- 1 Eliot as Revolutionary
- 2 Goethe and Modernism: The Dream of Anachronism in Goethe's Roman Elegies
- 3 Ezra Pound: The Solitary Volcano
- 4 Does Time Exist?
- 5 The Age of Authenticity: An American Poet in England
- 6 Whitman and Wilde in Camden
- 7 Dangerous Thoughts, Puzzling Responses
- 8 Scaling the Wall
- 9 Mass Death and Resurrection: Notes on Contemporary, Mostly American, Jewish Fiction
- 10 Rilke, Einstein, Freud and the Orpheus Mystery
- 11 Shrouds Aplenty (on poems of Janowitz, et al)
- 12 Ambushes of Amazement (on poems of Wakoski)
- 13 Dangerous and Steep (on poems of Jacobsen)
- 14 Small Touching Skill (on poems of Ponsot)
- 15 Language Mesh (on Paul Celan)
- 16 Sweet Extra (on poems of Cuddihy, Ray)
- 17 Maze of the Original (on translating poetry)
- 18 Approaching the Medieval Lyric
- 19 Dark Passage (on poems of Stafford)
- 20 Mistress of Sorrows (on Ingeborg Bachmann)
- 21 The Innocence of a Mirror (on poems of Oliver)
- 22 Peskily Written (on Sade)
- 23 Is There Sex after Sappho?
- 24 Saving One's Skin (on medieval poetry)
- 25 Brilliant White Shadow (on poems and prose of Saba)
- 26 Serpent's Tale (on Minoan archeology)
- 27 How Honest Was Cellini?
- 28 The Poetry of No Compromises (on poems of Rehder)
- 29 Assigning Names (on poems of Nurkse)
- 30 History and Ethics: Bruni's History of Florence
- 31 Virgil's Aeneid Made New (a translation by Robert Fagles)
- 32 Painting with Poetry (on the poems of Annie Boutelle)
- 33 Vampires and Freedom (on the work of Erik Butler)
- 34 How the West Learned to Read and Write: Silent Reading and the Invention of the Sonnet
- List of Publications
- Index
Summary
It is fashionable these days to denigrate as misleading the conventional terms for historical periods, and in particular “Renaissance,” substituting for them with reckless abandon the far more misleading “early modern period.” This implies that the events of, say, the twelfth century glide along a magnetic wire either into Modernism or the Wright brothers or computer programming. In fact “Renaissance,” with its clear imputation of rebirth, á la the Swiss journalist- turned- historian Jacob Burckhardt, who first popularized it in his Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860), retains an accuracy hard to beat. Nor is it much of an achievement to replace clarity with smog.
Clarity amounts to insight, and granted that “Renaissance,” like other period terms such as “Middle Ages,” represents more a state of mind than a span of time, it also retains a potent whiff of pithiness for its seminal events, whose dates are well established. Few painters, sculptors and architects in the know in fifteenth- and sixteenth- century Italy had any doubt that they were living through a time that as the mathematician- philosopher Marsilio Ficino noted in 1492, “like a golden age, has restored to light the liberal arts.” Nor, like Ficino, were they less than certain that “the ancient singing of songs to the Orphic lyre,” along with “grammar, poetry, rhetoric, painting, sculpture, music,” was “almost extinct,” and that their revival, like that of astronomy, “has recalled the Platonic teaching from darkness into light.” Nor were educated sixteenth- century Italians confused about style. They understood that the discovery in Rome in 1504 of the statue of Laokoön and his sons, perhaps an original Greek depiction of the legendary priest who warned the Trojans of their impending doom, or a Roman copy dating from the first or second century BC, had inspired Michelangelo and other Italian sculptors and painters with the lost perfections of Classicism. Educated Europeans knew that in philosophy and belles lettres a rebirth, later to be dubbed the Renaissance, had arrived with equivalent calendrical precision. Here the long- abiding darkness had lifted three centuries earlier, and they enjoyed the lights of liberation that continued to stream through the history of ideas and literature following important twelfth- century translations into Latin of Plato and Aristotle.
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- Information
- Poetry and FreedomDiscoveries in Aesthetics, 1985–2018, pp. 193 - 202Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2020