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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12705
Title: liTo Clip Elysium": Desire, Structure, and the Meaning of Misprision in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis.
Authors: Kuchar, Gary
Advisor: Silcox, Mary
Department: English
Keywords: English Language and Literature;English Language and Literature
Publication Date: Sep-1998
Abstract: <p>This thesis begins by examining the ways in which Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis anticipates its own criticism. For insofar as the critical history of Venus and Adonis attempts to enclose or explain "what" the poem means, rather than "how" the poem means, it tends to repeat the dramatic and lexical motions of the poem itself By exploring the most pronounced discrepancies in the critical discussion around the poem, I show that interpretations of Shakespeare's epyllion which strive to locate a definitive center for the text--be it allegorical, psychological, or historical...tend to reveal the ways in which a reader's desire inhabits the text. Indeed, the poem's lack of a satisfying resolution has led a number of critics to ascribe a sense of closure for the poem's conclusion, just as its representation of ambiguous and aggressive female sexuality has lead to a series of incomplete readings, which repeat the actions of poem. The second section of the thesis then attempts to explain "how" the poem's structure imagery, and intertexuality evoke a sense of frustration in its readers. The poem's structure, I argue, is base. on a series of repeated patterns that moves from pursuit and opposition to ostensible but unrealized union. Although the poem's imagery and narrative structure appears to move towards a moment of synthesis in which Venus and Adonis unite, the poem never actually reaches such a point. The narrative an imagistic structure of Shakespeare's epyllion thus tantalizes the reader's hope for resolution, without ever fulfilling such a desire.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12705
Identifier: opendissertations/7569
8641
3437510
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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