The Anxiety of Influence
208
Book • Nonfiction
1970s
1973
Adult
18+ years
The Anxiety of Influence by Harold Bloom is a critically acclaimed 1973 monograph in which Bloom argues that poetry is largely the result of later poets' responses to their predecessors' works, particularly their misreading of these works. Bloom develops the theory from his study of nineteenth-century Romantic poetry but posits it as generally applicable across creative fields. The book outlines six "revisionary ratios" through which poets engage with and attempt to overcome the influence of their predecessors, resulting in a complex dynamic of anxiety and creativity.
Contemplative
Challenging
Informative
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The Anxiety of Influence by Harold Bloom has received praise for its insightful analysis of literary influence and the poetic struggle. Bloom's erudition and unique theoretical perspective are commendable, but some readers find his dense prose and complex ideas challenging. The book is a seminal yet polarizing work in literary criticism.
A reader who enjoys The Anxiety of Influence by Harold Bloom is likely a literary scholar, critic, or student with a deep interest in literary theory and the relationships between writers. Comparable readers might appreciate Literary Theory: An Introduction by Terry Eagleton or Poetics by Aristotle.
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The Anxiety of Influence introduces Harold Bloom's original theory that literary creativity arises from a writer's relationship with influential predecessors, which became a significant concept in literary criticism.
Harold Bloom coined the term "misprision" in this work, which describes a poet's creative reinterpretation of their predecessors' work as a means of self-definition.
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The book was first published in 1973 and has since sparked extensive academic discussions and debates, establishing Bloom as a central figure in literary criticism.
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208
Book • Nonfiction
1970s
1973
Adult
18+ years
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