- 영문명
- Beyond Byzantium: A Study of Yeats’s Transcendental Problem in his Later Poetry
- 발행기관
- 한국예이츠학회
- 저자명
- 장호진(Ho-Jin Chang)
- 간행물 정보
- 『한국 예이츠 저널』35권, 139~162쪽, 전체 24쪽
- 주제분류
- 인문학 > 언어학
- 파일형태
- 발행일자
- 2011.06.30
5,680원
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국문 초록
The purpose of this study is to trace Yeats’s efforts toward an ultimate reconciliation of the contrary forces of human experience as they are reflected in his later poetry written Beyond Byzantium, and to explore the relationship between existential awareness and artistic vitality.
Though Yeats reached Byzantium in 1927, from The Wanderings of Oisin to “Byzantium” he yearned for stasis and release, and thus sought the solace to be found in never-never lands ranging from the woods of Arcady and Tir-nan-Oge to the golden boughs of Byzantium. Yet a disquieted romantic and an unaccommodated man, he returned to the living world of unfinished men and the dross of their mortal pain. The world of the “dying generations,” for all its corruption and impermanence, is the place where Yeats, after much sailing, finally dropped anchor.
Yeats ran his course between the extremities implicit in “Perfection of the life, or of the work,” and by the end of his career he took his stand with the claims of his art and the passions that make it possible. “Tragic Gaiety,” the hero’s rising above evil fortune and circumstance, is at once the matrix and the pinnacle of his final, transforming vision, and Yeats’s most significant legacy to our “tired” and “hysterical” age. Thus Yeats’s great achievement lies in his exposition of the artist’s will to transcend phenomenal limitations, and in the symbolic identification of creator and created.
“Bitter and Gay,” the dominant notes of most of the poetry of Yeats’s last years, lay the tragic scene beyond Byzantium, and it was there that he finally reached a reconciliation with “Time.” Not transcendence, however, but the simple triumph of trying to be a total man was Yeats’s final accomplishment. After all the anguish and the judgements, at the close of his life he repented nothing, and could cry “Rejoice” because it is only through the despair born of tragedy that we can achieve true gaiety and unity in empathy with humanity. That was the joyful voice of a man who knew how to create out of destruction. This wholeness of vision which Yeats finally attained is the prime concern of this study.
영문 초록
목차
키워드
해당간행물 수록 논문
- 비잔티움을 넘어서: 예이츠의 후기시에 나타난 초월의 문제 연구
- 메타시학으로 본 예이츠 시 「레다와 백조」
- W. B. Yeats's “Byzantium” and Zen Meditation
- 예이츠의 중기시에 나타난 모드 곤의 정치적 의미
- Perfection of Art in Yeats and Joyce: “Leda and the Swan” and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
- 예이츠 초기시의 상징주의와 마스크 이론의 갈등
- 예이츠는 그의 『환상록』에서 무엇을 하고 있나?
- 예이츠와 소포클레스의 오이디푸스
- Michael Wood, Yeats and Violence. (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2010)
- The Authentic Power of Debunking Literature: Focusing on Famine Poems
- 비잔티움 시편에 나타난 현실과 이상
- Old Age and Art in Yeats
참고문헌
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