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Memorial University - Electronic Theses and Dissertations 1
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Document Description
Title
Al
Purdy
:
the
curable
romantic
Author
Drodge
,
Susan
,
1968-
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1991.
Dept.
of
English
Language
and
Literature
Date
1991
Pagination
v, 105 leaves
Subject
Purdy
,
Al
,
1918---Criticism
and
interpretation;
Degree
M.
A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English Language and Literature
Discipline
English Language and Literature
Language
Eng
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
97-99.
Abstract
The
poetry
of
Al
Purdy
is
simultaneously
informed
by the
contrary
perspectives
of
realism
and
romanticism.
This
duality
of
perspective
is
necessary
in
order
to
satisfy
both
his
involvement
with
direct
,
modern
experience
and his
intuition
of
profound
,
continuous
existence.
Realism
and
romanticism
provide
the
divergent
means
by
which
he
can
support
seemingly
contradictory
possibilities
,
such
as
transience
and
permanence
,
inconsequence
and
significance
,
failure
and
redemption.
The
realistic
poetic
persona
intellectually
challenges
those
traditional
,
social
ideals
which
precipitate
a
sense
of
exclusion
,
failure
, and
futility.
Through
the
deflation
of
ideals
, he
repudiates
the
conventional
assumption
of
Canadian
limitation
and
suggests
failure
is
the
product
of a
defeatist
mentality
,
rather
than an
inescapable
,
modern
reality.
His
characteristic
self-deprecation
and
ironic
stance
become
the
subversive
means
by
which
he
contests
societal
ideals
and the
notion
of
failure
as that
which
falls
short
of those
standards.
His
intellectual
transcendence
of
failure
does
not
,
however
,
satisfy
his
emotional
and
spiritual
faculties.
His
romantic
impulse
, by
contrast
,
yields
the
means
of
emotionally
transforming
the
harshness
of
realistic
experience.
He
hypothesizes
that there
is
a
transcendental
continuum
of
existence
which
guarantees
eternal
meaning
and
significance
,
substantially
eclipsing
past
and
present
failures.
For
Purdy
,
failure
can
be
most
effectively
transformed
through
a
synthesis
of
realism
and
romanticism
which
advances
, as an
absolute
, a
commitment
to the
dignity
of
life
itself.
However
, in his
urgency
to
redeem
humankind
from
dismal
,
modern
reality
, he
neglects
certain
social
and
political
considerations
,
particularly
in those
poems
which
concern
Canada's
native
peoples
and their
historical
displacement.
While
the
conventional
romantic
persona
and
style
virtually
disappear
as
Purdy
matures
as a
poet
,
romanticism
itself
never
ceases
to be an
integral
influence
in his
poetic
cosmos.
Purdy's
romanticism
evolves
primarily
in its
structural
expression
,
rather
than in its
idealistic
intensity
and
manifestation.
The
romantic
ideals
of the
mature
poet
are those
which
can
be
consummated
within
daily
experience
and
encourage
human
fraternity
,
rather
than
precipitating
a
sense
of
inadequacy
and
failure.
In the
poetry
of
Al
Purdy
,
realistic
awareness
and
romantic
reflection
can
yield
a
lavish
image
of
human
existence.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76099302
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(12.25
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Drodge_Susan2.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
328558.cpd