From Poe to Rimbaud: A Comparative View of Symbolist Poetry

Authors

  • William Pietrykowski The Ohio State University

Abstract

Though geographically isolated from each other in the latter half of the Nineteenth Century, Walt Whitman, Edgar Allan Poe, and their French contemporaries, Charles Baudelaire, and Arthur Rimbaud, worked analogously to revolutionize poetic representation.  Baudelaire and Rimbaud worked in the Symbolist tradition, while Whitman and Poe stood together in the United States as revolutionary poetic thinkers. While French civilization created the social and artistic contexts for Symbolism, French Symbolists probably appropriated much of their formally artistic ideas from Poe and Whitman.  Most critics agree Poe was most likely more influential to the formation of Symbolist thought, while Whitman’s force is a bit unclear. Aligning Baudelaire and Poe, as analogous artists, and Whitman and Rimbaud, From Poe to Rimbaud, a Comparative View of Symbolist Poetry will defend American importance in the formation and development of French Symbolist poetry.

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Published

2011-10-06

Issue

Section

JUROS Arts & Humanities