The Rhetoric of Vision: Essays on Charles Williams

Portada
Charles Adolph Huttar, Peter J. Schakel
Bucknell University Press, 1996 - 356 páginas
Charles Williams (1886-1945) was hailed by Eliot, Auden, Agee, and others for his metaphysical, ethical, and social vision. In this collection, nineteen scholars examine the rhetorical means he employed to convey that vision and the rhetorical theories that guided him. The contributors vary in approach, from close analysis of Williams's syntactic and semantic strategies to study of his larger concern for an organic unity of rhetoric and idea. They also address his cultivation of affect, aporia, dislocation, allusion, the rhetoric of genres, and other strategies. About half the essays consider Williams's fiction. They explore the theological roots of his theory of imagery; the rhetorical implications of his belief that language is inherently meaningful; his methods of creating "subjective correlatives" for heightened states of consciousness; and, in individual works of fiction, his revisionary use of time-travel and ghost-story conventions, his rhetorical application of Blakean "contraries", aspects of his diction and syntax, and his call to pursue integrity of speech as an ideal. Three essays discuss Williams's poetry, specifically his use of the occult as a mode of imagining, the social significance that permeates his idea of coinherence, and the key literary and personal influences on the evolution of his mature poetic style. Another three essays treat Williams's rhetoric in plays - his debts to medieval drama, his success with conversational style, and his reliance on ambiguity and skepticism. Finally, four examine Williams's evenhandedness and liveliness as a historian, his prose style in theological writing, his sensitivity to the rhetoric of detective fiction both as reviewer andas writer, and his markedly poetic style in literary criticism.
 

Contenido

The Athanasian Principle in Williamss Use of Images
27
Language and Meaning in the Novels of Charles Williams
44
Affective Stylistics in Charles Williamss Fiction
59
Fiction Individual Works
73
Time in the Stone of Suleiman
75
A Metaphysical Epiphany? Charles Williams and the Art of the Ghost Story
90
Skepticism and Belief in The Place of the Lion
103
Descent into Hell
113
Drama
215
An Audience in Search of Charles Williams
217
Rhetorical Strategies in Charles Williamss Prose Play
238
Thomas Cranmer and Charles Williamss Vision of History
248
History Theology Criticism
263
The Rhetoric of The Descent of the Dove and Witchcraft
265
A Peculiar Density
277
The Evidence of the Reviews
290

The Cessation of Rhetoric and the Redemption of Language
132
Poetry
163
The Occult as Rhetoric in the Poetry of Charles Williams
165
Coinherent Rhetoric in Taliessin through Logres
179
Continuity and Change in the Development of Charles Williamss Poetic Style
192
Charles Williamss Critical Vision
309
Concordances
323
Contributors
331
Index
337
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