At Home in Time

Forms of Neo-Augustanism in Modern English Poetry

By Patrick Deane
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Literary Criticism
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773564848, 272 pages, September 1994

Description

The presence of these values, Deane contends, is not a curiosity but part of a vital and discernible tradition of modern neo-Augustanism that has been previously overlooked. By tracing these writers' common interest in Horace, John Dryden, and Samuel Johnson, he uncovers important links between seemingly diverse modern poets. Deane challenges the whole interpretation of literary modernism, which has traditionally linked the modern poets to the Romantics and seen both as anti-Augustan. Deane concludes that these modern poets share a ready and pragmatic acceptance of linear time, within which all acts of artistic and social creativity must take place - a crucial factor in both the form and substance of their writings. That art, language, and society are inseparable under such conditions was a bracing thought for the young Auden, but a potentially disturbing one for more recent poets.

Reviews

"Deane offers an important corrective to the received history of twentieth-century poetry and English literature. Anyone who takes an active interest in the history of twentieth-century poetry will read this book with interest." Lawrence Rainey, Department of English, Yale University. "By broadening our conception of the range of aesthetic and social values that have taken shelter under the auspices of literary modernism, At Home in Time will encourage a widespread reappraisal of the relationships between Augustanism and modernism." John Reibetanz, Department of English, University of Toronto.

"Deane offers an important corrective to the received history of twentieth-century poetry and English literature. Anyone who takes an active interest in the history of twentieth-century poetry will read this book with interest." Lawrence Rainey, Department of English, Yale University.
"By broadening our conception of the range of aesthetic and social values that have taken shelter under the auspices of literary modernism, At Home in Time will encourage a widespread reappraisal of the relationships between Augustanism and modernism." John Reibetanz, Department of English, University of Toronto.