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2014 | 23/1 | 115-127

Article title

From Masque to Masquerade: Monarchy and Art in Andrew Marvell’s Poems

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Abstracts

EN
A considerable number of Andrew Marvell’s poems contain reference to various forms of visual arts. Marvell’s use of this type of imagery frequently leads to some type of transformation of a psychological, spiritual, political or social reality, with more or less overt allusions to the Neoplatonic notions of sublimation. However, this predominantly Neoplatonic notion of art, characteristic of Marvell’s earlier lyrics, disappears from his Restoration poems. In the satires, art, instead of idealising and elevating the corporeal, is rather dragged into the sphere of matter, where, together with the objects of the poet’s mockery, it undergoes a carnivalesque deformation. Such a degradation or carnivalisation of art imagery in Marvell’s Restoration satires is not only generically conditioned, but has its roots in the political, social and philosophical legacy of the Republic.

Contributors

  • University of Warsaw

References

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  • Jones, Ann Rosalind. 1996. “Dematerialisation: textile and textual properties in Ovid, Sandys, Spenser.” Subject and Object in Renaissance Culture. Eds. Mergreta de Grazia, Maureen Quilligan, and Peter Stallybrass. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 189–209.
  • Jonson, Ben. 1947. The Poems. The Prose Works. Ed. C. H. Herford, Percy and Evelyn Simpson, 11vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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  • Riebling, Barbara. 1995. “England Deflowered and Unmanned: The Sexual Image of Politics in Marvell’s ‘Last Instructions’.” Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900 35 (Winter 1995): 137–157.
  • Smith, Nigel (ed). 2003. The Poems of Andrew Marvell. Harlow: Pearson Longman.

Document Type

Publication order reference

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bwmeta1.element.desklight-45664242-9727-47c0-9e8c-3c5b2cc9cbab
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