Criticism > Poetry > The Ring and the Book, Robert Browning - W. Warwick Slinn (essay date autumn-winter 1989)
The Ring and the Book, Robert Browning - W. Warwick Slinn (essay date autumn-winter 1989)
W. Warwick Slinn (essay date autumn-winter 1989)
SOURCE: Slinn, W. Warwick. “Language and Truth in The Ring and the Book.” Victorian Poetry 27, nos. 3-4 (autumn-winter 1989): 115-33.
[In the following essay, Slinn analyzes the relationship between “human language and poetic truth” in The Ring and the Book.]
This essay will focus on the textualization of meaning in The Ring and the Book and thus on the poem as a critique of transcendence.1 Critics have often noted the concerns in the poem with both truth and language but generally have identified these in terms of a separation between human falsehood (error-ridden language) and divine (transcendent) truth.2 My point is that this opposition is conflated. There is no separate divine truth in the poem, no dramatized position that corresponds to the position of, for example, Milton's God in Paradise Lost, no moment that escapes discourse....
[The entire page is 9088 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- John M. Menaghan (essay date spring 1983)
- Mary Ellis Gibson (essay date 1985)
- Anne Hiemstra (essay date 1985)
- Paul Zietlow (essay date spring 1987)
- W. Warwick Slinn (essay date autumn-winter 1989)
- Susan C. Hines (essay date 1990)
- Mary Ellis Gibson (essay date 1990)
- L. M. Findlay (essay date winter 1991)
- Simon Petch (essay date 1992)
- Alexander Pettit (essay date spring 1993)
- Candace Ward (essay date spring 1996)
- Melissa Valiska Gregory (essay date winter 2000)
- Norman Friedman (essay date May 2000)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
