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Journal ArticleDOI

Romantic Balloons: Toward a Formalist Technology of Poetics

Arden Hegele
- 01 Jan 2017 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 2, pp 201-216
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TLDR
The authors traces the history of the hot-air balloon as a figure for formalist approaches to reading poetry, and finds the most compelling and enigmatic investigation of the trope in Anna Letitia Barbauld's mock-epic poem of 1797, "Washing Day."
Abstract
This essay traces the history of the hot-air balloon as a figure for formalist approaches to reading poetry, and finds the most compelling and enigmatic investigation of the trope in Anna Letitia Barbauld's mock-epic poem of 1797, "Washing Day." Anticipating Nicholson Baker, Maureen McLane, and Helen Vendler's modern uses of the hot-air balloon as a symbol for formalist literary analysis, Barbauld concludes her poem with the figure of the Montgolfier balloon as a "bubble" that is equated with the production of verse, a simile rife with anxiety about the relationship of poetics to the domestic labor of washing, but also to the manifold discourses implied by the Romantic-era balloon, such as political invasion, femininity, cosmopolitanism, and even madness. What emerges at the end of Barbauld's poem, however, is not the dismissal of eighteenth-century women's work (whether laundry or poetry) but a transhistorical model of poetic form as a technology to be operated by a close reader, an idea that subverts Cleanth Brooks' metaphor of the "well wrought urn" through Margaret Cohen's account of "craft." Resisting Brooks' notion that the poetic vessel is antiquarian, inert, and stable, Barbauld's airborne vessel, like Cohen's ships, is dynamic, labor-intensive, and buffeted by external currents. The transhistorical reach of the trope of the balloon through literary criticism that this paper traces brings into focus the reader's relation to poetic form in a new way, to ask what treating formalism as technology might mean for the conception of close reading as labor.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Little Formalism

Sandra Macpherson
- 01 Jan 2015 - 

The mummy! : a tale of the twenty-second century

Loudon
TL;DR: Long-awaited reprint of a rare nineteenth-century science fiction novel with a feminist perspective as mentioned in this paper was the first attempt to publish a novel from a women's perspective in the 1990s.
Book

The Sublime Invention: Ballooning in Europe, 1783–1820

TL;DR: The Emergence of Aeronautics and Ballooning: The Enlightenment and the Utility of Ballooning 3 Balloonists and their Audience 4 Controlling the Skies: States and Balloons 5 Consuming Balloons 6 Balloons Inspiring Consumption Conclusion
Journal ArticleDOI

Anna Letitia Barbauld's ‘Washing-Day’ and the Montgolfier Balloon:

TL;DR: Barbauld's "Washing-Day" is a poem endangered by misreading, it has received three significant critical comments in the past few years, all well-intentioned and all off the mark, The first appeared in 1986 in Ann Messenger's His and Hers as mentioned in this paper.