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Percy Shelley’s touch, or, lyric depersonalization

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dc.contributor.authorFreer, AW
dc.date.accessioned2019-01-15T00:30:35Z
dc.date.available2019-01-15T00:30:35Z
dc.date.issued2019-08
dc.description.abstractCan a lyric touch? And if so, who does the touching? These questions put pressure on some persistent debates over lyric, which turn on a series of separations: between poet and fictional speaker; between ritual events and imagined worlds; and between transhistorical forms and historical reading practices. The prospect of touch in lyric suggests an intimate, personal and embodied form of contact between speaker and addressee, while at the same time potentially extending that contact to any receptive reader or listener. The reflexive nature of touch, as Didier Anzieu showed in his writing on the skin, forecloses any hard distinction between subject and object; to be touched is also to make contact. And yet lyrics invariably promise more than they can literally fulfil, whether they proffer the numinous familiarity of a lover’s body or “a paradoxical intimacy between strangers who cannot be said to truly come into contact with one another but between whom something might nevertheless be understood to have been communicated.” If lyric aspires to be a kind of contact, its representations of touching are nevertheless indistinguishable from imaginative fantasy. In short, touch captures the indeterminacy of lyric address, at once personal and impersonal, an abstracted metaphor and a claim on the material and historical particularity of individual bodies. Touch cuts across the either/or debates regarding the definition and function of lyric by insisting on its tense both/and structure.
dc.identifier.doi10.17863/CAM.35288
dc.identifier.eissn1545-6951
dc.identifier.issn0026-8232
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/287968
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherUniversity of Chicago Press
dc.publisher.urlhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1086/703445
dc.subject43 History, Heritage and Archaeology
dc.subject47 Language, Communication and Culture
dc.subject4303 Historical Studies
dc.subject4705 Literary Studies
dc.titlePercy Shelley’s touch, or, lyric depersonalization
dc.typeArticle
dcterms.dateAccepted2018-08-27
prism.endingPage114
prism.issueIdentifier1
prism.publicationDate2019
prism.publicationNameModern Philology: critical and historical studies in postclassical literature
prism.startingPage91
prism.volume117
rioxxterms.licenseref.startdate2019-08
rioxxterms.licenseref.urihttp://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
rioxxterms.typeJournal Article/Review
rioxxterms.versionAM
rioxxterms.versionofrecord10.1086/703445

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