Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Introduction: Dancer and Dance: Yeats’s Romantic Modernism and Critical Revisionism
- Chapter 1 The Irony of Tradition in W.B. Yeats’s Autobiography: Dialectical Hermeneutics Beyond the New Criticism
- Chapter 2 The Specialty of Self-Victimization: On Antithetical Revisionism
- Chapter 3 Yeats in Theory: Blackmur, Bloom, De Man and Hartman
- Chapter 4 The Divisions of Yeats Studies Continued
- Chapter 5 Modernism’s Global Identity: on the Dogmatic Imagination in Yeats, Freud and Beyond
- Chapter 6 Yeats With Lacan: Toward the Real Modernism
- Chapter 7 The Spirit Medium: Yeats, Quantum Visions and Recent Lacanian Studies
- Chapter 8 And All the Ceremonies to Come: Of High Modernism, Visionary Violence and Post-Marxism
- Afterword: The Reader in Yeats
- Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Introduction: Dancer and Dance: Yeats’s Romantic Modernism and Critical Revisionism
- Chapter 1 The Irony of Tradition in W.B. Yeats’s Autobiography: Dialectical Hermeneutics Beyond the New Criticism
- Chapter 2 The Specialty of Self-Victimization: On Antithetical Revisionism
- Chapter 3 Yeats in Theory: Blackmur, Bloom, De Man and Hartman
- Chapter 4 The Divisions of Yeats Studies Continued
- Chapter 5 Modernism’s Global Identity: on the Dogmatic Imagination in Yeats, Freud and Beyond
- Chapter 6 Yeats With Lacan: Toward the Real Modernism
- Chapter 7 The Spirit Medium: Yeats, Quantum Visions and Recent Lacanian Studies
- Chapter 8 And All the Ceremonies to Come: Of High Modernism, Visionary Violence and Post-Marxism
- Afterword: The Reader in Yeats
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Yeats and RevisionismA Half Century of the Dancer and the Dance, pp. viiiPublisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2022