''The New Poet'': Novelty and Tradition in Spenser’s Complaints
ISBN: 9781846313660
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / Liverpool University Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Language & Literature;

This gracefully written and well thought-out study deals with a neglected collection of poems by Spenser, which was issued in 1591 at the height of his career. While there has been a good deal written in recent years on two of the poems in the collection, OCyMother HubberdOCOs TaleOCO and OCyMuiopotmosOCO, Brown innovatively addresses the collection in its entirety. He urges us to see it as a planned whole with a consistent design on the reader: he fully acknowledges, and even brings out further, the heterogeneity of the collection, but he examines it nevertheless as a sustained reflection on the nature of poetry and the auspices for writing in a modern world, distancing itself from the traditions of the immediate past. The strength of this work lies both in the originality of its project and in the precision and enterprise of the close reading that informs its argument. Interest in the concern of SpenserOCOs poetry with the nature of poetry is in the current critical mainstream, but here the attentiveness is both unusually focused and unusually sustained. Brown garners more than would be expected from the translations in the Complaints, while at the same time including striking and individual chapters on the better known OCyMother HubberdOCOs TaleOCO and OCyMuiopotmosOCO; he advances understanding of these extremely subtle texts and fully justifies his wider approach to the collection as a whole. Arguing that SpenserOCOs relationship to literary tradition is more complex than is often thought, Brown suggests that Spenser was a self-conscious innovator whose gradual move away from traditional poetics is exhibited by the different texts in the Complaints . He further suggests that the Complaints are a OCypoetics in practiceOCO, which progress from traditional ideas of poetry to a new poetry that emerges through SpenserOCOs transformation of traditional complaint."

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