Article ID: CBB694766507

Tennyson’s Wrinkled Feet: Ageing and the Poetics of Decay (2021)

unapi

This article argues that Tennyson’s ‘Tithonus’ (1860) draws together ageing and decay through the poem’s formal wrinkling: moments where metrical disruption, folding, slackness, or concealment correspond to the insights derived from the perspective of great age — chiming the poet’s keynotes of disappointment, mourning, and loss. I turn to ‘Ulysses’ (1842) and ‘The Lotos-Eaters’ (1832) — poems with a similar, though differently stressed, investment in age and decay — to demonstrate the political stakes of this thesis. While for Ulysses old age presents the triumphant opportunity to live ‘Life to the lees’, this arises from a sense of masculine anxiety about imminent decay. ‘The Lotos-Eaters’ positions ageing and decay against the imperative to work as a means of decentring the monolithic temporality of capitalist utility. These poems theorize the poetics of rot as a senescent challenge to the masculine and capitalist assumptions about the inherent value of mastery, productivity, and vigour.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB694766507/

Similar Citations

Chapter Stott, Rebecca; (2013)
“Tennyson's Drift”: Evolution in “The Princess” (/isis/citation/CBB001422072/)

Chapter Purton, Valerie; (2013)
Darwin, Tennyson and the Writing of “The Holy Grail” (/isis/citation/CBB001422074/)

Book Purton, Valerie; (2013)
Darwin, Tennyson and Their Readers: Explorations in Victorian Literature and Science (/isis/citation/CBB001421851/)

Thesis Shearer, Emily Carroll; (2014)
“Our Little Systems Have Their Day”: Tennyson's Poetic Treatment of Science (/isis/citation/CBB001567592/)

Article Sara Zadrozny; (2021)
Of Cosmetic Value Only: Make-Up and Terrible Old Ladies in Victorian Literature (/isis/citation/CBB388592897/)

Chapter Nys, Michiel; (2013)
“An Undue Simplification”: Tennyson's Evolutionary Afterlife (/isis/citation/CBB001422075/)

Chapter Ebbatson, Roger; (2013)
Tennyson's “Locksley Hall”: Progress and Destitution (/isis/citation/CBB001422071/)

Article Sanders, Mike; (2000)
Manufacturing accident: Industrialism and the worker's body in early Victorian fiction (/isis/citation/CBB000111798/)

Book James F. Stark; (2020)
The Cult of Youth: Anti-Ageing in Modern Britain (/isis/citation/CBB600996331/)

Chapter Beer, Gillian; (2013)
Systems and Extravagance: Darwin, Meredith, Tennyson (/isis/citation/CBB001422079/)

Article Gavin Wright; (2020)
Slavery and Anglo-American capitalism revisited (/isis/citation/CBB835225218/)

Review Peter A. Coclanis; (July 2016)
Review of "Empire of Cotton: A Global History" (/isis/citation/CBB369516381/)

Book Brian P. Luskey; (2020)
Men is Cheap: Exposing the frauds of free labor in Civil War America (/isis/citation/CBB381848420/)

Book John Troyer; (2020)
Technologies of the Human Corpse (/isis/citation/CBB756490213/)

Article Victoria M. Nagy; Alana J. Piper; (2020)
The Health and Medical Needs of Victoria's Older Female Prisoners, 1860–1920 (/isis/citation/CBB919561721/)

Book Peter N. Stearns; (2020)
The Routledge History of Death since 1800 (/isis/citation/CBB965518317/)

Chapter Rowlinson, Matthew; (2013)
History, Materiality and Type in Tennyson's “In Memoriam” (/isis/citation/CBB001422073/)

Book Henchman, Anna; (2014)
The Starry Sky Within: Astronomy and the Reach of the Mind in Victorian Literature (/isis/citation/CBB001550349/)

Authors & Contributors
Purton, Valerie
Beer, Gillian
Coclanis, Peter A.
Rowlinson, Matthew
Sanders, Mike
Stark, James F.
Journals
19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Book History
Economic History Review
Health and History
Social History of Medicine
Technology and Culture
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Anthem Press
MIT Press
Oxford University Press
Routledge
Middle Tennessee State University
Concepts
Science and literature
Poetry and poetics
Aging
Medicine and society
Labor and laborers
Capitalism
People
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord
Darwin, Charles Robert
Meredith, George
Chambers, Robert
Cuvier, Georges
Eliot, George
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
21st century
Modern
Places
Great Britain
United States
Australia
Birmingham (England)
Institutions
Royal Society of London
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment