Recursive Desire: Rereading Epic Tradition

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Hardcover edition published 1997. Paperback edition published 2014. EBook edition published 2014 Epic has often been seen as a dead genre, intrinsically patriarchal and nationalistic. Furthermore, the psychological model most frequently applied to the relations between poets has been a violent one - the Freudian masterplot of Oedipus slaying the father to possess the mother. The limited usefulness of such simplistic explanations of epic is readily apparent when confronted with the continuing production of epic poetry long after its so-called death; when confronted with the contemporary drive toward epic among women poets, people of color, and postcolonial poets; and when faced with epic's fundamentally recursive desire - obvious in oral epic, but common to the entire genre - to repeat rather than to kill or evade its precursors. Recursive desire, rooted in more basic preoedipal negotiations of union and separation rather than in Oedipal conflict, provides an elegant and far more useful explanation. By rereading and substantially redefining epic in this way, this book recognizes and reinvests with meaning the vital recursive qualities of the genre. Examining a diverse array of texts from the 'Epic of Gilgamesh' to Derek Walcott's 'Osmeros', from the Homeric epics to H. D.'s 'Helen in Egypt'. The book develops a broadened, inclusive, and living tradition of epic poetry, demonstrating the continuities of that tradition across dramatic discontinuities in time, place, worldview, and technology. 'Recursive Desire' rereads epic tradition and specific epic poems in ways that challenge traditional notions of the genre and open up unexplored fields of endeavor to students of epic, of poetry, and of narrative. With its more powerful and comprehensive psychological model of poetic relations, the book provides readers with a new understanding of epic poetry and its vital, shifting, polyvocal array (and disarray) of textual forces.

Author(s): Jeremy M. Downes
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
Year: 2014

Language: English
Pages: XIV+306
City: Tuscaloosa

Preface: Through Smoking Pyres ix
1. Fierce Warres and Faithfull Loves: Violence, Sex, and Recursive Desire in Epic Tradition 1
2. Warda and Worca: Oral Epics and Preoedipal Concerns 24
3. Twice Faithless Troy: The Happy Substitute 61
4. Fierce Loves and Faithless Wars: Milton, Macpherson, and the Inverted Epic 111
5. With Half Unravel'd Web: The Fragmented Epic 147
6. Sleeping with the Enemy: Women and Epic 206
7. In This Late Century: Radical Pluralism and the Future of Epos 243
Notes 253
Selected Bibliography 291
Index 299