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Looking ahead Plans for remaining weeks in the quarter Handouts
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Page 1: Looking ahead Plans for remaining weeks in the quarter Handouts.

Looking ahead

Plans for remaining weeks in the quarter

Handouts

Page 2: Looking ahead Plans for remaining weeks in the quarter Handouts.

Dr. Faustus Review

Parodic Structure How are we to

understand Faustus?

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Sidney

Astrophil and Stella Penelope Devereux, Lady Rich

Sonnet Italian

Sonnet cycle—first recognizable one in English 108 sonnets and 11 songs

Way of looking at a collection of sonnets rather than a “plot”

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Neoplatonism

“Divine Beauty” through an “earthly lover”

“material world is a path to the spiritual world, rather than an obstacle to or diversion from it”

(Murfin and Ray, 292)

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Petrarchanism--Neoplatonism Petrarch—14th c. Italian poet, Francesco

Petrarca Sonnet form plus distinctive use of:

Imagery Figures of speech Formal style Petrarchan conceit (exaggerated portrait of lady’s

beauty and cruelty) Hyperbole Oxymoron

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Petrarchanism/Neoplatonism

Sidney engages this poetic tradition, but also questions it

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Sonnet form

14 lines rhymed iambic pentameter 2 forms for Sidney/Shakespeare Italian/Petrarchan English/Shakespearean

Mapping a sonnet

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Considering scansion

Who will in fairest booke of nature know

How virtue may best lodged in beauty be,

Let him but learn of love to read in thee,

Stella, those fair lines which true goodness show.

There shall he find all vices overthrow,

Not by rude force, but sweetest sovereignty

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In-class scansion

Try the next two lines

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Of reason, from whose light those night-birds fly,

That inward sun in thine eyes shineth so.

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Sonnet 71

“Give me some food”

Playing with the Neoplatonic tradition

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Form matters

Why choose a sonnet?

What is the connection between form and meaning?

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Sonnet 1

Look in thy heart and write Sonnet is about love, but also about writing

and style, about “invention” Some elements to know: alexandrine (iambic

hexameter), “fain” (l. 1), childbirth metaphor, How does the poem flow? Does the lady get to speak?

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Sonnet 31

Personification of the Moon Speaker standing outside the courtly world Opening monosyllables and repetitions

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Sonnet 9

Petrarchan convention (see also sonnet 6) “Rich” Penelope Rich, an idealized love, Queen

Elizabeth?

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New classes Winter quarter only LTEN 110 and 112

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Shakespeare’s Sonnets

Form: 3 Quatrains/Couplet abab cdcd efef gg

The sonnet vogue

Shakespeare as icon and the perils of autobio-crit.

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Is this a sonnet cycle?

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The Figures of the Sonnets

The Young Man

The Rival Poet

The Dark Lady

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The Young Man

Who is the Young Man?

What are the implications of autobiographical criticism?

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The Young Man

Many references to time Sonnet 3 Sonnet 19 Sonnet 55 Sonnet 65

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Tomb of Mary and Elizabeth

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Poetic form

Sonnet 129

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The Dark Lady

Sonnet 130

Sonnet 127

Often read in relation to Petrarchan convention

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The Dark Lady

Kim Hall, Things of Darkness

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The Defence of Poesy

Three types of poets p. 958

Vates—Prophets Philosophical Poets “Right” poets—”to teach and delight”

(echo of Chaucer’s “sentence and solaas?)

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Poetry as imaginative literature

Poet as “maker” (956)

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Poetry improves humanity

Delivering a golden world (957) Cyrus (957) Erected wit/infected will (957) Poetry draws us to perfection (neoplatonic)

(959) Architectonike (960)

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Charges Against Poetry

P. 967

Waste of time Mother of lies Nurse of abuse

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Sidney’s response

“No learning is so good as that which teacheth and moveth to virtue” (967)

“of all writers under the sun the poet is the least liar” (967)

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Neil Gaiman

“telling lies to tell the truth”

What makes the canon?