Synopses & Reviews
Empson's classic may "have even more to teach us about language now than It did In 1951. when this remarkable book was first published," writes Jonathan Cutler in his valuable foreword. Empson elegantly demonstrates the weight of allusion and Implication borne by even the simplest words of our language: man, honest, quite, dog. he explores the complex play of such words in social situations and in literature, producing in the process brilliant critical essays--on sense in Wordsworth's
Prelude, honest in
Othello and
King Lear all in
Paradise Lost--which go straight to the heart of the matter.
Lively and irreverent, this book offers persuasive accounts of the structure of metaphor, the statements carried by words, and the failure of dictionary entries to capture the most pertinent aspects of the structure and meaning of words. Culler writes that It stakes out "a new position in debates about meaning and context about the literary in Its relation to the social and the historical. Empson's brilliant discussions of words which express complex social attitudes toward one's fellows or toward moral principles open rich chapters of social and literary history."
Review
Mr. Empson...focuses on complex words because they are the most direct and valuable evidence for the understanding of our cultural tradition...The promise of the approach seems unbounded. The achievement is great not only in originality, insight, and entertainment, but in truth and substance. So great that Mr. Empson's right to be called the most distinguished critic of his generation can hardly now be questioned. Ian Watt
About the Author
Sir William Empson (1906-1984) held the Chair of English Literature from 1953 to 1971 at the University of Sheffield.Jonathan Culler is Class of 1916 Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Cornell University.
Table of Contents
1. Feelings in Words
2. Statements in Words
3. Wit in the Essay on Criticism
4. All in Paradise Lost
5. The Praise of Folly
6. Fool in Lear
7. The English Dog
8. Timon's Dog
9. Honest Man
10. Honest Numbers
11. Honest in Othello
12. Sense and Sensibility
13. Sense in Measure for Measure
14. Sense in the Prelude
15. Sensible and Candid
16. Mesopotamia
17. Pregnancy
18. Metaphor
19. A is B
20. The Primitive Mind
21. Dictionaries
Appendices (I-III)
Index