Coleridge and Textual Instability

About The Book

Textual pluralism holds that there can exist more than one authoritative version of a literary work and that only by viewing the collective versions can the constitution of a work be seen. In Coleridge and Textual Instability Jack Stillinger establishes and documents the existence of numerous different authoritative versions of Coleridge's best-known poems: sixteen or more of The Eolian Harp for example eighteen of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and comparable numbers for This Lime-Tree Bower Frost at Midnight Kubla Khan Christabel and Dejection: An Ode. Such multiplicity of versions raises interesting theoretical and practical questions about the make-up of the Coleridge canon the ontological identity of any specific work in the canon the editorial treatment of Coleridge's works and the ways in which multiple versions complicate interpretation of the poems as a unified (or as the case may be disunified) body of work. Providing much new information about the texts and production of Coleridge's major poems Stillinger's study offers intriguing new theories about the nature of authorship and the composition of literary works.
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