William Blake and the Productions of Time
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Challenging the idea that a writer’s work reflects his experiences in time and place Andrew M. Cooper locates the action of William Blake’s major illuminated books in the ahistorical present an impersonal spirit realm beyond the three-dimensional self. Blake Cooper shows was a formalist who exploited eighteenth-century scientific and philosophical research on vision sense and mind for spiritual purposes. Through irony dialogism two-way syntax and synesthesia Blake extended and refined the prophetic method Milton forged in Paradise Lost to bring the performativity of traditional oral song and storytelling into print. Cooper argues that historicist attempts to place Blake’s vision in perspective as opposed to seeing it for oneself involve a deeply self-contradictory denial of his performativity as a poet-artist. Rather Blake’s expansion of linear reading into a space of creative self-conscious collaboration laid the basis for his lifelong critique of dualism in religion and science and anticipated the non-Euclidean geometrics of twentieth-century Modernism.
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