Ellmann, Richard. The Identity of Yeats. 1964.
----. Yeats: The Man and the Masks. 1979.
Foster, R.F. W.B. Yeats: A Life. 2 vols. 1997, 2003.
Kermode, Frank. Romantic Image. 1957.
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17. 10. Záviš Šuman
\r\nMallarmé's Un coup de dés
\r\nIn my lecture I shall focus on some of the essential features of French Symbolist poetry such as musicality of the verse, autonomy of poetic image and its impersonality. A careful examination of two Mallarmé’s poems (Un Coup de dés jamais n’abolira le hazard / A Throw of the Dice Never Will Abolish Chance and Epilogue, later titled Las de l’amer repos / Tired of bitter rest) will help us to sketch why and by what shifts it has been so influential to later generations of poets. It would be helpful if you read these two poems before the lecture.
\r\nTexts on-line:
\r\nhttp://jimhanson.org/documents/Athrowofthedicetypographicallycorrect02-18-09.pdf
\r\nhttp://jimhanson.org/tiredofbitterrest.html
\r\nSuggested readings:
\r\nBarbara Johnson: \"The Dream of Stone\". In D. Hollier (ed.), A New History of French Literature, Harvard University Press, 2001, p. 743-748. (A survey of Parnasse movement.)
\r\nPatrick McGuinness: \"Symbolism\". In W. Burgwinkle, N. Hammond, E. Wilson (ed.), The Cambridge History of French Literature, Cambridge University Press, 2011, p. 479-487. (A very good introduction to Symbolism in France where you will find solid recommendations how to read Symbolist poems.)
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24. 10. Záviš Šuman
\r\nApollinaire's Alcools
\r\nIn my lecture I will try to summarize Apollinaire’s impact on avant-garde poetry. I shall focus on Alcools (1913), and especially on the first poem of this collection, called Zone. By comparison of this poem with its first draft I will point out to the main characteristic features of Apollinaire’s poetry such as free association and the role of the poetic \"I\" in his poetry.
\r\nReadings: http://www.parisdigest.com/monument/eiffel_tower_poem_zone_guillaume_apollinaire.pdf
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31. 10. Martin Pokorný
\r\nEzra Pound's Personae
\r\nEzra Pound’s early poetry is self-defined by the concept of persona: a theatre mask, or - with a reference to Robert Browning - a dramatic voice. The programmatic style is based on a historically minded concept of the poet’s task.
\r\nBibliography:
\r\nHugh Kenner: The Poetry of Ezra Pound, London 1951.
\r\nDonald Davie: Ezra Pound: Poet as Sculptor, New York 1964.
\r\nHugh Kenner: The Pound Era, Los Angeles 1973.
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7. 11. Daniel Soukup
\r\nPlayful Transience in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens and Vítězslav Nezval
\r\nThe lecture will explore correspondences between Wallace Stevens first book of poetry (Harmonium, 1923), and \"Poetism\", a Czech literary movement which flourished in the interwar era. The lecture will offer a close reading of selected poems, as well as a more general comparison of two kinds of modernism, and an existential perspective on how creative playfulness finds both its limit and meaning in transience.
\r\nPrimary sources
\r\nNezval, Vítězslav: Básně I, ed. Milan Blahynka, Brno: Host 201.
\r\nStevens, Wallace: Collected Poetry & Prose, New York: Library of America, 1997.
\r\nSecondary sources
\r\nCook, Eleanor: A Reader’s Guide to Wallace Stevens, Princeton: Princeton UP, 2007.
\r\nTeaching Wallace Stevens, ed. by John Serio and B. J. Leggett, Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1994.
\r\nVendler, Helen: Wallace Stevens: Words Chosen Out of Desire, Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1984.
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14. 11. Martin Pokorný
\r\nT. S. Eliot's Observations
\r\nT. S. Eliot’s poetry before the publication of The Waste Land has its own specific style, characterized by formal rigour and a unique emotive modulation. The concept of observation, used by Eliot himself in the title of his first collection, will be employed and developed in order to capture this group of texts.
\r\nA. O. Matthiessen: The Achievement of T. S. Eliot, New York 1935.
\r\nHugh Kenner: The Invisible Poet: T. S. Eliot, New York 1959.
\r\nNorthrop Frye: T. S. Eliot: An Introduction, New York 1963.
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21. 11. Mariana Machová
\r\nElegy as an Essential Lyric Genre
\r\nElegy can be seen as one of the basic lyric genres, acquiring particular importance in the 20th century. The lecture will briefly touch on the history of elegy (its classic roots, its importance in Anglo-Saxon poetry), while the main focus will be on the role of elegy in modern lyric and the varied ways the genre has been handled by modern poets writing in English.
\r\nSelected Bibliography:
\r\nWeisman, Karen. The Oxford Handbook of the Elegy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010.
\r\nRamazani, Jahan. Poetry of Mourning: The Modern Elegy from Hardy to Heaney. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994.
\r\nFuss, Diana. Dying Modern: A Meditation on Elegy. Durham: Duke University Press, 2013.
\r\nSacks, Peter M. The English Elegy: Studies in the Genre from Spenser to Yeats. Baltimore:Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985.
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28. 11. Mariana Machová
\r\nObjects, Landscapes, People: Description in Modern Lyric
\r\nThe lecture will discuss the ways modern lyric poets approach descriptions of landscapes, objects (including animals), and people, drawing attention to the fact that the very act of describing, of putting things into words is seen as potentially problematic, or even impossible. Examples of poems which focus on description will be taken from poets ranging from Marianne Moore, through Seamus Heaney, to Thom Gunn.
\r\nSelected Bibliography:
\r\nCostello, Bonnie. Planets on Tables: Poetry, Still Life, and the Turning World. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2008.
\r\nCostello, Bonnie. Shifting Ground: Reinventing Landscape in Modern ","inLanguage":"en"}]} The course is dedicated to modern poetry. Scholars from different departments will present several topics concerning modern poetry generally from the end of 19th century to the present. The aim of lectures is to explore fundamental aspects of the modern lyric from a comparative point of view.
The lecture will be accompanied by a brief discussion of 1-2 poems.Anotace