Transcendental Wordplay

Transcendental Wordplay America's Romantic Punsters and the Search for the Language of Nature

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Hardback (31 Aug 2000)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Throughout the first half of the nineteenth century, America was captivated by a muddled notion of "etymology." New England Transcendentalism was only one outcropping of a nationwide movement in which schoolmasters across small-town America taught students the roots of words in ways that dramatized religious issues and sparked wordplay.
Shaped by this ferment, our major romantic authors shared the sensibility that Friedrich Schlegel linked to punning and christened "romantic irony." Notable punsters or etymologists all, they gleefully set up as sages, creating jocular masterpieces from their zest for oracular wordplay. Their search for a primal language lurking beneath all natural languages provided them with something like a secret language that encodes their meanings. To fathom their essentially comic masterpieces we must decipher it.
Interpreting Thoreau as an ironic moralist, satirist, and social critic rather than a nature-loving mystic, Transcendental Wordplay suggests that the major American Romantics shared a surprising conservatism. In this award-winning study, Professor West rescues the pun from critical contempt and allows readers to enjoy it as a serious form of American humor.

Book information

ISBN: 9780821413241
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Imprint: Ohio University Press
Pub date:
Edition: 1
DEWEY: 808.042097309034
DEWEY edition: 21
Language: English
Number of pages: 518
Weight: 1089g
Height: 254mm
Width: 171mm
Spine width: 41mm