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Arthur Hallam Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Steven Dillon

This literature criticism consists of approximately 21 pages of analysis & critique of Arthur Hallam.
This section contains 6,067 words
(approx. 21 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Arthur Henry Hallam - Critical Essay by Steven Dillon

Critical Essay by Steven Dillon

SOURCE: Dillon, Steven. “Canonical and Sensational: Arthur Hallam and Tennyson's 1830 Poems.Victorian Poetry 30, no. 2 (Summer 1992): 95-108.

In the following essay, Dillon critiques Hallam's “On Some of the Characteristics of Modern Poetry, and on the Lyrical Poems of Alfred Tennyson.” Dillon claims the essay establishes an artificial distinction between reflection and sensation in order to canonize Tennyson.

In an important essay, Gerald Bruns suggests that the movement from Romanticism to Victorianism could be characterized as a paradigm shift from transcendence to immanence.1 The vertical axis of imagination and epiphanic nature (“spots of time”) moves towards a horizontal axis of empirical perception and continuous history. The terms of Arthur Hallam's essay on Tennyson's 1830 Poems, Chiefly Lyrical seem to reproduce just this shift. Hallam skips over the complex language of transcendental faculty psychology to be found in Coleridge and Kant, and effectively goes back to the Enlightenment discourse...
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This section contains 6,067 words
(approx. 21 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Arthur Henry Hallam - Critical Essay by Steven Dillon
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Arthur Henry Hallam - Critical Essay by Steven Dillon from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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