Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Carroll, Lewis - Michael Holquist (essay date 1969)
Carroll, Lewis - Michael Holquist (essay date 1969)
Michael Holquist (essay date 1969)
SOURCE: Holquist, Michael. “What is a Boojum? Nonsense and Modernism.” Yale French Studies, no. 43 (1969): 145-64.
[In the following essay, Holquist examines The Hunting of the Snark as an experimental work that resists critics' attempts to interpret it as an allegory.]
The other project was a scheme for entirely abolishing all words whatsoever; and this was urged as a great advantage in point of health as well as brevity. … An expedient was therefore offered, that since words are only names for things, it would be more convenient for all men to carry about them such things as were necessary to express the particular business they are to discourse on.
Swift, Gulliver's Travels
What am I to do, what shall I do, what should I do, in my situation, how proceed? By aporia pure and simple? Or by affirmations and negations invalidated as...
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Criticism
- Michael Holquist (essay date 1969)
- Harold Beaver (essay date 1976)
- Edmund Miller (essay date 1976)
- Richard Kelly (essay date 1977)
- Lionel Morton (essay date December 1978)
- Morton N. Cohen (essay date 1984)
- Morton N. Cohen (essay date 1984)
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- Sophie Marret (essay date 1993)
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- Elizabeth Sewell (essay date fall-winter 1999)
- Michael Irwin (essay date 2000)
- M. S. Ashbourne (essay date spring 2001)
- Ben Silverstone (essay date 2001)
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