1st Edition

Progress & Identity in the Plays of W.B. Yeats, 1892-1907

By Barbara A. Suess Copyright 2003
    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    Progress and Identity in the Poems of W. B. Yeats explores the ways in which Yeats's plays offer an alternative form of progress via a philosophical system of opposites: Always seeking the opposite, the nature of which changes as we change, we continually augment our personalities, and ultimately improve society, with the inclusion of the Other. This system, which eventually became Yeats's doctrine of the mask, provided his contemporaries with a method of changing what science, Platonism, and Victorian bourgeois ideologies claimed to be inescapable qualities of self. Progress and Identityn relocates Yeats's literary, social, and political relevance from his essentializing cultural nationalism to his later, more broad-minded definitions of progress.

    Chapter 1 “[F]ull of personified averages”; Chapter 2 Literatures of Progress; Chapter 3 Progress as Material Gain; Chapter 4 Recovering the Feminized Other; Chapter 5 “[N]ice little playwrights, making pretty little plays”;

    Biography

    Barbara A. Suess