Description
Poetry and Bondage investigates the complex theoretical and historical dynamics between poetic constraint and creative expression. Andrea Brady demonstrates how formal restrictions—from meter and rhyme to fixed stanzaic patterns—have fundamentally shaped the development of lyric poetry across centuries and cultures.
The book challenges conventional assumptions about artistic freedom by showing how constraints have actually liberated poets to explore deeper meanings and innovations. Brady traces the evolution of constrained forms from classical antiquity through contemporary practice, analyzing how poets have negotiated, resisted, and transformed formal requirements.
Drawing on literary history, critical theory, and close textual analysis, this study offers fresh perspectives on canonical works while recovering overlooked voices and experimental practices. Essential reading for scholars of poetry, literary theory, and the history of aesthetic thought, the work fundamentally reframes our understanding of how formal limitations generate rather than inhibit poetic meaning and innovation.







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