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Wallace Stevens and the Cycle of Desire


Article # : 13229 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 10 / 1987  3,913 Words
Author : Milton J. Bates
Milton J. Bates is associate professor of English at Marquette University and author of Wallace Stevens: A Mythology of Self.

       WORDS CHOSEN OUT OF DESIRE
       Helen Vendler
       Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1986
       86 pp., $3.95
       
       WALLACE STEVENS AND POETIC THEORY
       Conceiving the Supreme Fiction
       B.J. Leggett
       Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1987
       224 pp., $22.50
       
        When the history of obscurity in twentieth-century poetry is written, it will show that literary critics have done their part to sabotage the lines of communication between the poet and his audience. For Wordsworth, the poet was "a man speaking to men." The men have remained, waiting more or less patiently to be spoken to, but the man (or woman) speaking has gradually faded from the scene, like Alice's Cheshire cat. T.S. Eliot, in his influential essay "Tradition and the Individual Talent" (1919), replaced Wordsworth's "man" with "the tradition" and characterized the poet's progress as a "continual extinction of personality." Taking their cue from Eliot the critic rather than Eliot the poet, New Critics of the 1930s and 1940s taught us to speak not of the person in the poem but the persona, or mask. Heaven forbid that we should ascribe this fictive utterance to the creature of flesh and blood who wrote it! Contemporary critical theory has answered with a vengeance Eliot's prayer for the extinction of the self. In poststructuralist criticism, the "I" of the lyric poem no longer refers to anything outside the poem: it is merely a cipher in an enclosed linguistic system.
       
        During the 1970s, Wallace Stevens' later poems became a happy hunting ground for this tribe of critics, due partly to their emotional austerity. As J. Hillis Miller observes in a landmark essay on "The Rock," "There is a bleak impersonality of tone and locution in Stevens' poem which forbids thinking of it or feeling it as the autobiographical statement of a recognizable person, the man Wallace Stevens, vice president of the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, author of Harmonium" (Georgia Review, Spring 1978). Though Miller singles out "The Rock" for its peculiar impersonality, he does not hesitate to generalize the doctrine he derives from it - namely, that the poem dismantles or "deconstructs" the very notion of authorial presence in a written text: "Self in the sense of individual personality is one of the major illusions dissolved by the
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