’Who’ll be the clerk?’ : Repainted, rerhymed and vaguely personal in the death of Cock Robin
Autoři | |
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Rok publikování | 2024 |
Druh | Další prezentace na konferencích |
Fakulta / Pracoviště MU | |
Citace | |
Popis | This presentation provides a biographical reading of W. D. Snodgrass’ rewriting of the Old English nursery rhyme «Who Killed Cock Robin?» Viewed in the context of the entire collection The Death of Cock Robin, a special collaboration between Snodgrass and a painter DeLoss McGraw, the poem entitled «Coroner’s Inquest» is, arguably, not so much a parody as the peculiar retelling of the story of the bird’s death, where, upon close examination, this very act proves to symbolize the metaphorical death of the poet’s (purely) «confessional» practice, which then sparks and informs his further - broader - contemplations about his literary beginnings and legacy that, admittedly, rests upon them and then rather contrasting creative endeavors later on. By means of close reading and with William Spengemann’s concept of «poetic autobiography» in mind, the analysis addresses Snodgrass’ predicament at the time of the collection's publication and how it eventually informed the rhetoric in the Coroner's Inquest; putting his language under scrutiny, the study dissects the deliberateness and meaning behind as well as wider implications of his own beautifully obnoxious perfect rhyme. |