“Those blessed structures”: Robert Lowell’s Architectural Aesthetic
Gill, J
Date: 25 December 2021
Article
Journal
Bishop-Lowell Studies
Publisher
Penn State University Press
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This article reads Robert Lowell’s poetry in terms of its engagement with architecture. It
argues that at crucial moments in American history, and in Lowell’s life, the architectural
environment of the various places he called home (including Boston, Maine, Ohio, New
York, and Kent, England) offered a perspective, a language, and a ...
This article reads Robert Lowell’s poetry in terms of its engagement with architecture. It
argues that at crucial moments in American history, and in Lowell’s life, the architectural
environment of the various places he called home (including Boston, Maine, Ohio, New
York, and Kent, England) offered a perspective, a language, and a set of forms through
which to negotiate personal, historical, and cultural change. This is a process that he
achieved, in part, with reference to the work of other poets including Elizabeth Bishop,
Hart Crane and William Carlos Williams. By moving beyond a general reading of place,
and towards a specific and granular reading of architectural figuration, I show that Lowell
is able to contemplate and eventually to restructure the relationship between tradition and
innovation – a process that is vital to his developing poetics.
English
Collections of Former Colleges
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