Aspects of Form and Genre in the Poetry of Edwin Morgan

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Cambridge Scholars Press, 2003 - Literary Criticism - 209 pages
Edwin Morgan was born in 1920 in Glasgow and studied at Glasgow University where he later taught literature. He is much admired for his experimental writings, his â ~socialâ (TM) poems, as well as for the diversity of his output.

The present book comprises a chapter on Morganâ (TM)s early vision poems (which have received scant critical attention hitherto); two on his hodoiporika, The Cape of Good Hope and The New Divan; a chapter on his deployment of the grotesque mode, centred chiefly on the Instamatic Poems and The Whittrick; another on his adaptations of the elegy, in which Edgecombe propose a new genre called the â oethanasimon;â and, finally, an examination of his various monologic poems, read in terms of his avowed enterprise of â oevoicingâ the universe. The study is topped by a prologue that sets out the consistency of Morganâ (TM)s vision over time, and tailed by an epilogue that connects his various critical pronouncements to his remarkably diverse output.

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Contents

The Vision Poems
6
Hodoiporika I Poems of Travel and Discovery
17
Hodoiporika II The New Divan
45
Edwin Morgan and the Grotesque
84
Some Morgan Versions of Elegy
108
The Monologic Poems
133
Epilogue
163
Notes
181
Select Bibliography
189
188
205
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About the author (2003)

Rodney Stenning Edgecombe is Associate Professor of English at the University of Cape Town. He studied at Trinity College, University of Cambridge, where he received his PhD in 1981. He has won numerous prestigious prizes including the Royal Society of St. George Prize for English at Rhodes University and the Members' English Prize at Cambridge in 1978/79. He is author of numerous books and articles on the work of George Herbert, George Crabbe, Patrick White, Muriel Spark, Thomas Gray, Richard Wilbur, Leigh Hunt and Howard Nemerov.

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