
Robert Frost's Political Body
by Grzegorz Kosc
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Pub Date Dec 15 2014 | Archive Date Mar 09 2015
Boydell & Brewer | Camden House
Description
In Robert Frost's poetry lives the figure of an authoritative public body: a physical, human body that personifies classical liberalism. A deep structure, it manifests itself in his images, the characterization of his speakers, their tones of voice, and -- most crucially -- in his sense of poetry's appropriate scope. To glimpse this political body, Grzegorz Kosc interrogates the poet's views on a number of subjects never explored by Frost criticism: Maya monumental art; Shelley's bodies of sensibility and martyrdom; the bodies of US presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft; the association of radical liberalism with bodily deformation; the ulteriority of physical behavior; the popularity of statuettes that supplanted traditional, monumental sculptures of political leaders. For Frost, all these yielded important clues to the writing of a good poem, which had to have the features of a well-shaped, self-disciplined, and stoic body. The final chapter explores the images of Frost's own body used for the frontispieces of the reprint editions of his poetry, images that are the symbols of Frost's aesthetics. Hence the book's title, which not only points to the central structure of Frost's poetry but also suggests that the poet envisioned his own portrait as illustrating the body of political power underlying his aesthetics.
Grzegorz Kosc is Assistant Professor at the University of Lodz and the University of Warsaw, Poland. He is former President of the Robert Frost Society.
Advance Praise
"Greg Kosc has written a book like no other on Frost. Highly original, and from a position no one could have anticipated, comes this startling, fresh example of what I can only call a somatic reading of Robert Frost and the body politic (and impolitic). Everyone knows about the poet and JFK. But who knew Frost assumed his varied postures in wary response to the sheer physical presence of Teddy Roosevelt, the immoderate girth of William Howard Taft, or the super-cool standing of Calvin Coolidge? -- to name only three candidates. Robert Frost's Political Body also offers the fullest treatment ever to come of the significance for Frost of the famous bust Aroldo du Chêne did of the poet -- and of other representations of his physique. Among the many pleasures here is the most detailed account we have of the importance, for Frost, of Milton's Comus. Robert Frost's Political Body is also the first major study of the poet to draw on the highly unusual notebooks he kept. Reader, you come, too; surprises await."
--Mark Richardson, author of The Ordeal of Robert Frost and coeditor of The Letters of Robert Frost
"This meticulously researched and quite fascinating book shows Frost in the full light of his times, as it makes a powerful and persuasive case for the influence of the poet's intellectual life and material culture on his republican poetics."
--Tyler Hoffman, Rutgers University, author of Robert Frost and the Politics of Poetry
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Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781571135834 |
PRICE | $110.00 (USD) |