"All Seems Unlinked Contingency and Chance": The Perception of Matter in Percy Bysshe Shelley’s Queen Mab
How is revolutionary philosophy sounded by poetry? This paper explores perception and materialism in Percy Bysshe Shelley’s teenage writings, frequently dismissed by critics as juvenile and lacking in philosophical complexity. By approaching the role of dreams, the imagination, and perception in Shelley’s poem Queen Mab alongside contemporary translations of Lucretius’s poem De Rerum Natura I show that the poem’s philosophy of matter is more subtle and sophisticated than has been previously thought, as ‘contingency and chance’ operate via necessity that is built into the laws of nature. I discuss how Shelley used the material technology of the printed book and the poem’s sounded dimension to challenge readers’ perception of matter, connecting the freedoms of poetic thought to the coming-into-being of a future political utopia. I conclude by considering why it is important to reconsider the status and politics of matter in Romantic poetics, and how such a poetics contributes to our historical understanding of more sensitive and attentive forms of life.
Date:
24 April 2024, 11:00 (Wednesday, 1st week, Trinity 2024)
Venue:
History Faculty, George Street OX1 2RL
Venue Details:
Colin Matthew Room
Speaker:
George Adams (Oxford)
Organising department:
Department of History of Art
Part of:
Interdisciplinary Visual Culture Studies Group
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Members of the University only
Editor:
Belinda Clark