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CDELT Occasional Papers in the Development of English Education
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Hassanein, M. (2019). Poetry, Poetics, and Politics in the Nile Sonnets. CDELT Occasional Papers in the Development of English Education, 66(2), 101-132. doi: 10.21608/opde.2019.126875
Mona Salah El-Din Hassanein Hassanein. "Poetry, Poetics, and Politics in the Nile Sonnets". CDELT Occasional Papers in the Development of English Education, 66, 2, 2019, 101-132. doi: 10.21608/opde.2019.126875
Hassanein, M. (2019). 'Poetry, Poetics, and Politics in the Nile Sonnets', CDELT Occasional Papers in the Development of English Education, 66(2), pp. 101-132. doi: 10.21608/opde.2019.126875
Hassanein, M. Poetry, Poetics, and Politics in the Nile Sonnets. CDELT Occasional Papers in the Development of English Education, 2019; 66(2): 101-132. doi: 10.21608/opde.2019.126875

Poetry, Poetics, and Politics in the Nile Sonnets

Article 4, Volume 66, Issue 2, April 2019, Page 101-132  XML PDF (459.86 K)
Document Type: Original Article
DOI: 10.21608/opde.2019.126875
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Author
Mona Salah El-Din Hassanein Hassanein
Abstract
Arising from a poetry-writing contest on the subject of the Nile, the Nile Sonnets of Shelley, Keats, and Hunt reflect the social nature of Cockney poetry and at the same time evoke the emphasis on the perceiving subject characterizing the poetics of Romanticism. Written in 1818, Shelley's "To the Nile," Keats's "To the Nile," and Hunt's "The Nile" reveal the passionate interest in Egypt dominating British cultural life in the early nineteenth century. The common subject of the sonnet contest was the canvas upon which individual themes emerged. Shelley utilizes the subject figuratively to create an analogy between the course of the river and the workings of the poet's mind, stressing the need for both poetry and the Nile as providers of different, but equally important, types of sustenance; Keats explores the paradoxical nature of the riverscape which combines fertility and barrenness, resolving the tension by exercising his doctrine of "negative capability"; and Hunt dwells on the decline of the great civilization associated with the Nile to convey an implied critique of political repression, conjoining poetics and rhetoric to inspire hope for social and political change. Despite differences in theme, the three sonnets share an important feature: they epitomize the individual poetics of their writers. The scope of the present paper is not restricted to comparison and contrast. An eclectic research methodology is adopted to gain a thorough insight into the differing treatments of the subject. The poems are considered within the context of the sonnet as a genre in order to show how the thematic concerns take shape and develop through the formal and rhetorical parts associated with the sonnet. A consideration of the history of the exploration of Africa's interior is necessary to understand the Nile's physiography as described in the sonnets. In addition to examining the ways in which textual tensions are resolved, the sonnets are analyzed in light of the poetics informing them. Since Hunt's sonnet has an intended effect relevant to its audience, the sound devices/patterns and the rhetorical modes enhancing the poem's message are also examined.
Keywords
The Nile Sonnets; Romantic poetics; Shelley; Keats; Hunt
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