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W.B. Yeats and the learning of the imagination

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First Sentence
"In a paper on 'The Late Poetry of W.B. Yeats', published in 1936, the American critic R.P. Blackmur wrote that 'fatalism, Christianity, and magic are none of them disciplines to which many minds can consciously appeal today."
128 pages
~2h 8min to read
Published 1999 Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture 1 views
ISBN
0903880717, 0903880725
Editions
Hardcover
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Description

At a time when Yeats studies are narrowing down the focus of interest to the minutiae of the poet's personal life, this book argues that by his 'learning of the Imagination' W. B. Yeats was not only a great poet but also a great imaginative mind. His work marks a cultural watershed in that where as English poetry up to and including Eliot drew upon European civilisation, Yeats additionally drew upon world culture: Irish mythology, Arabic, Japanese, Indian wisdom and much besides. The extent and import of his learning cannot, as the author argues, be appreciated by a mentality that merely reflects current materialist values. The Irish poet stood within a tradition of spiritual and esoteric knowledge which has been largely ignored by his critics making many of their judgements inappropriate. -- from back cover.

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