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This study examines the role of indeterminacy - what Chesterton called "the final skepticism which can find no floor to the universe" - in nineteenth-century British art.
Beginning in 1806 with Wordsworth's questioning of the essential ground and companion-ableness of things and concluding with Hardy's dramatization in Wessex Poems of the treacherous relationship between the word and the image, 'If Mine Had Been the Painter's Hand' chronicles the growing sense of the antagonism of things as evidenced in the irreconcilable tension between the visual and the verbal. The writers examined here rely in varying degrees and at critical junctures in their artistic careers on the pictorial to forge analogs as evidence of the kindredness of things.
Their failure testifies to their sense that all is, as De Quincey observed, "irrelate," indeterminate.
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Subjects
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Times
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1
'If mine had been the painter's hand': the indeterminate in nineteenth-century poetry and painting
1999, Peter Lang
in English
0820440639 9780820440637
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2
'If Mine Had Been the Painter's Hand': The Indeterminate in Nineteenth-Century Poetry and Painting (Literature and the Visual Arts)
October 1998, Peter Lang Publishing, Lang AG International Academic Publishers, Peter
Hardcover
in English
0820440639 9780820440637
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 229-243) and index.


