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2 Lyric
Get accessSusan Stewart , poet, critic, and translator, is the Annan Professor of English at Princeton University. Her five books of poems include Columbarium, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award in Poetry in 2003, and, most recently, Red Rover. Her prose works include On Longing, Poetry and the Fate of the Senses, and The Open Studio: Essays on Art and Aesthetics. She is a current chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, a former MacArthur Fellow and Guggenheim Fellow, and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
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Published:02 September 2009
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Abstract
This article looks at the historical interrelation of philosophy and lyric poetry. It explains that philosophers and lyric poets are alike because they both convey intelligible statements, employ formal structures and incorporate a social view from the outset. Despite these shared materials and aims, philosophy and poetry have some important differences. Philosophy strives for clarity and singularity in reference while lyric is always overdetermined. In addition, philosophy should be paraphrasable and translatable if its truth claims are universal, but poetry has finality of form, and to paraphrase it is a heresy; to translate it, a betrayal.
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