Fearful Symmetry (book)
LC Class | PR4147 .F7 1969 |
Fearful Symmetry: A Study of William Blake is a 1947 book by
literary critic Northrop Frye whose subject is the work of English poet and visual artist William Blake. The book has been hailed as one of the most important contributions to the study of William Blake and one of the first that embarked on the interpretation of many of Blake's most obscure works.[1] As Frye himself acknowledges, Blake's work is not to be deciphered but interpreted and seen within its specific historical and social contexts.[2]
In his preface of the 1969 edition, Frye writes:
"I wrote Fearful Symmetry during the
Jerusalem, one of the most hopeful signs is the immensely increased sense of the urgency and immediacy of what Blake had to say".[3]
Reception
Literary critic Camille Paglia writes in Sexual Personae (1990), that Fearful Symmetry is a "pioneering study", but that Frye "optimistically promotes sexual liberation in a way that seems, a weary generation later, simplistic and naive."[4]
References
- ISBN 0-8020-8813-9
- ISBN 0-8122-1558-3, Page 122
- ^ Northrop Frye, Fearful Symmetry: a study of William Blake (Princeton University Press, 1969)
- ISBN 0-300-04396-1.