Radial Design in Wallace Stevens

Authors

  • Terrance J. King

Abstract

In some early Stevens poems there is evidence of a typographical pattern I call "radial design, " a device in which the poet selects a central unit (such as a word) and on both sides evenly arranges a pattern of other units. Radial design is no accident. One finds not only a definite historical consistency in the way the pattern develops but a lso a tight continuity between it and ideas about language and perception expressed in the poems themselves. Stevens' overall aim is to impose this fixed, spatial structure upon the sequential flow of a poem in order to suspend the representational function of its language and thus compel us to observe words as things in themselves.

Author Biography

  • Terrance J. King
    Terrance J. King is assistant professor of English at Wayne State University (Detroit, MI 48202). He has published on Stevens and is currently engaged in preparing a book, Poetry of Words: A Study of Wallace Stevens' Theory of Language, in which he explores the various ways the poet makes language talk about itself.

Downloads

Published

1975-01-01

Issue

Section

Journal Article