Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
Words into Rhythm
English Speech Rhythm in Verse and Prose
Professor Harding assesses the rhythm in poetry and prose from a psychological standpoint.
D. W. Harding (Author)
9780521134347, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 11 March 2010
176 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1 cm, 0.23 kg
Critics take for granted the importance of rhythm in poetry and prose, above all its capacity for suggesting states of mind, especially emotional states. But they are seldom clear what range of effects rhythm can reasonably be credited with, nor even, at times, what exactly the term refers to. Professor Harding here views these and allied problems from a psychological standpoint. Rhythm as a means of suggesting states of mind is discussed in the light of its being not merely something the reader listens to, but something he does, a system of movement. Throughout the book, the realities of spoken language take precedence of prosodic fictions, and emphasis is placed on the poet's organization of speech rhythms within a line of verse, metrical or free. Poetry and prose from the fifteenth to the twentieth century provide passages for illustration and analysis.
Preface
1. The nature of rhythm
2. Speech and the rhythm of verse
3. Metrical set and rhythmical variation
4. Effects of deviation from metre
5. Rhythms of irregular verse
6. Unsatisfactory rhythms
7. Expressive effects of rhythm in verse
8. Modes of energy release in rhythm
9. Rhythms in prose
10. Expressive effects of prose rhythm
11. The gist
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: general [DSB]
