Formal approaches to poetry : recent developments in metrics
- Responsibility
- edited by B. Elan Dresher, Nila Friedberg.
- Imprint
- Berlin ; New York : Mouton de Gruyter, ©2006.
- Physical description
- 1 online resource (viii, 312 pages) : illustrations
- Series
- Phonology and phonetics ; 11.
Online
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Description
Creators/Contributors
Contents/Summary
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
- Contents
-
- Acknowledgements; Table of contents; Introduction;
- 1. Music and meter; A modular metrics for folk verse;
- 2. Metricality; What is "metricality"? English iambic pentameter;
- 3. English meter; Generated metrical form and implied metrical form; Anapests and anti-resolution; Shakespeare's lyric and dramatic metrical styles; Longfellow's long line;
- 4. Old Norse; The rise of the quatrain in Germanic: musicality and word based rhythm in eddic meters;
- 5. Mora counting meters; The function of pauses in metrical studies: acoustic evidence from Japanese verse; Iambic meter in Somali
- 6. Modelling statistical preferencesConstraints, complexity, and the grammar of poetry; Modelling the linguistics-poetics interface;
- 7. Russian meter; Generative metrics and the comparative approach: Russian iambic tetrameter in a comparative perspective; Structural dynamics in the Onegin stanza;
- 8. Classical and Roman metrics; The ancient iambic trimeter: a disbalanced harmony; Author index; Subject and language index; List of contributors
- Summary
-
This book will create greater public awareness of some recent exciting findings in the formal study of poetry. The last influential volume on the subject, Rhythm and Meter , edited by Paul Kiparsky and Gilbert Youmans, appeared fifteen years ago. Since that time, a number of important theoretical developments have taken place, which have led to new approaches to the analysis of meter. This volume represents some of the most exciting current thinking on the theory of meter. In terms of empirical coverage, the papers focus on a wide variety of languages, including English, Finnish, Estonian, Russian, Japanese, Somali, Old Norse, Latin, and Greek. Thus, the collection is truly international in its scope. The volume also contains diverse theoretical approaches that are brought together for the first time, including Optimality Theory (Kiparsky, Hammond), other constraint-based approaches (Friedberg, Hall, Scherr), the Quantitative approach to verse (Tarlinskaja, Friedberg, Hall, Scherr, Youmans) associated with the Russian school of metrics, a mora-based approach (Cole and Miyashita, Fitzgerald), a semantic-pragmatic approach (Fabb), and an alternative generative approach developed in Estonia (M. Lotman and M. K. Lotman). The book will be of interest to both linguists interested in stress and speech rhythm, constraint systems, phrasing, and phonology-syntax interaction and poetry, as well as to students of poetry interested in the connection between language and literature.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
Subjects
- Subjects
- Versification.
- LITERARY CRITICISM > Poetry.
- Metriek.
Bibliographic information
- Publication date
- 2006
- Series
- Phonology and phonetics ; 11
- ISBN
- 9783110197624 (electronic bk.)
- 3110197626 (electronic bk.)
- 9783110185225 (cloth ; alk. paper)
- 3110185229 (cloth ; alk. paper)
- 3110185229 (cloth ; alk. paper)