Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.22210/ur.2019.063.3_4.02

VISUALIZING POVERTY IN WORDSWORTH’S POETRY

Martina Domines Veliki orcid id orcid.org/0000-0001-8637-4414 ; University of Zagreb


Full text: english pdf 135 Kb

page 161-178

downloads: 774

cite


Abstract

This paper departs from the assumption that Wordsworth’s poetry is highly visual in its quality and it focuses on his three “great period” poems, “Michael”, “The Old Cumberland Beggar” and “Resolution and Independence” (1798–1805) to show how Wordsworth represents poverty. By taking as its starting point some New Historicist readings of these poems (Simpson, Pfau, Connell, Liu) which highlighted Wordsworth’s blindness to social reality of the poor, it wants to enlarge the scope of historicist readings by introducing the framework of the New Poverty Studies (Korte, Christ). Furthermore, it insists on the assumption that the Romantic need to visualize landscape in the picturesque form becomes an important strategy of “configuring” (Korte) the reality of the poor. In other words, the way in which the poor are represented in Wordsworth’s poetry tells us something about practical engagements with poverty in late eighteenth-century England. Also, Wordsworth’s position of a middle-class observer who builds the tension between the seen and the deliberately unseen aspects of his social surrounding, show us how Wordsworth unconsciously falls under the spell of a larger class-related sensibility and thus fails in his humanitarian project.

Keywords

William Wordsworth; New Historicism; New Poverty Studies; the picturesque

Hrčak ID:

235861

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/235861

Publication date:

5.12.2019.

Visits: 1.260 *