Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

'Full-grown lambs': Immaturity and 'To Autumn' *

View through CrossRef
While Keats's early publications were frequently derided by contemporary reviewers as puerile, the ode 'To Autumn' elicited generally approving comments. Indeed, the poem raised hopes in conservative quarters that Keats had, at last, 'grown up'. According to more recent critical orthodoxy, 'To Autumn' is regarded as having achieved a supreme, unimpeachable maturity. The overwhelming majority of scholarly addresses to the poem praise its poise and steadiness as it moves, resignedly, towards finality and closure. Countering such readings, I argue that 'To Autumn' actually represents one of Keats's most sustained and piercing attacks on the logic of mature power.
Title: 'Full-grown lambs': Immaturity and 'To Autumn' *
Description:
While Keats's early publications were frequently derided by contemporary reviewers as puerile, the ode 'To Autumn' elicited generally approving comments.
Indeed, the poem raised hopes in conservative quarters that Keats had, at last, 'grown up'.
According to more recent critical orthodoxy, 'To Autumn' is regarded as having achieved a supreme, unimpeachable maturity.
The overwhelming majority of scholarly addresses to the poem praise its poise and steadiness as it moves, resignedly, towards finality and closure.
Countering such readings, I argue that 'To Autumn' actually represents one of Keats's most sustained and piercing attacks on the logic of mature power.

Related Results

Historicizing Modern Slavery: Free-Grown Sugar as an Ethics-Driven Market Category in Nineteenth-Century Britain
Historicizing Modern Slavery: Free-Grown Sugar as an Ethics-Driven Market Category in Nineteenth-Century Britain
AbstractThe modern slavery literature engages with history in an extremely limited fashion. Our paper demonstrates to the utility of historical research to modern slavery researche...
About my ‘Autumn Music’ and ‘Universal Prayer’
About my ‘Autumn Music’ and ‘Universal Prayer’
Although my compositions are extremely diverse in character, I approach each new one in the same manner. I feel somewhat like an architect, tackling my work in three stages, always...
Autumn Killing
Autumn Killing
It is commonly held in the existing literature that prehistoric peoples were compelled to kill off an abnormally high proportion of their livestock in autumn because of a lack of w...
The Fox Project
The Fox Project
Picture a piece of land on the Iowa River in Central Iowa. Some of it is bottomland that floods over. Some of it is wooded hillside. Some is useful for farming. For the past 100 ye...
KAT4IA: K-Means Assisted Training for Image Analysis of Field-Grown Plant Phenotypes
KAT4IA: K-Means Assisted Training for Image Analysis of Field-Grown Plant Phenotypes
High-throughput phenotyping enables the efficient collection of plant trait data at scale. One example involves using imaging systems over key phases of a crop growing season. Alth...
Light reacclimatization of lower leaves in C4 maize canopies grown at two planting densities
Light reacclimatization of lower leaves in C4 maize canopies grown at two planting densities
C4 plants have high photosynthetic capacity but are inefficient under low light. In a canopy, lower leaves developed under high light are progressively shaded. To elucidate how low...
From tidal swamp to inland valley: on the social organization of wet rice cultivation among the Diola of Senegal
From tidal swamp to inland valley: on the social organization of wet rice cultivation among the Diola of Senegal
IntroductionStudents of West African rice agriculture (cf. Dresch 1949, Mohr 1969) often distinguish between the Upper Guinea coast, where wet rice has been grown for centuries in ...
Warsaw Autumn, 2002
Warsaw Autumn, 2002
Picking the chocolate-coated plums – a traditional Polish treat – from the abundance of riches on offer at the 45th annual Warsaw Autumn Festival (20–28 September 2002) sets a dele...

Back to Top