Cover: Why Lyrics Last: Evolution, Cognition, and Shakespeare’s Sonnets, from Harvard University PressCover: Why Lyrics Last in HARDCOVER

Why Lyrics Last

Evolution, Cognition, and Shakespeare’s Sonnets

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HARDCOVER

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$41.00 • £35.95 • €37.95

ISBN 9780674065642

Publication Date: 04/05/2012

Short

240 pages

5-1/2 x 8-1/4 inches

World

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[A] lively and unusual account of Shakespeare’s sonnets… [Boyd] has a lot of good things to say about the details of the sonnets, much that is subtle, humanly interested, and closely observed. He writes evocatively about the confusions and ambiguities of narrative in the poems.—Seamus Perry, The Times Literary Supplement

Boyd proves a delightful guide to the sonnets’ tortuous passages, artfully describing their twists and turns. He compares the sequence to a kaleidoscope that ‘continually taps or shakes its colored chips into new configurations’ at times teasingly reminiscent of nearby sonnets. Without story to seize our attention, Boyd argues, Shakespeare—like all lyric poets—must load his lines with ‘more or less pure patterns of verbal form’ that command our focus at the risk of exhausting it. Displaying a scholar’s skill and an evangelist’s enthusiasm, Boyd points out patterns sonic, semantic and imagistic… His volume marks an intriguing entry point into a line of inquiry that will surely continue to evolve, providing ever more particular reasons for our rhymes.—Abigail Deutsch, The Wall Street Journal

A most accessible book that blends the local with the vast, particularly in Elizabethan sonnets, which have the human disposition towards natty verbal patterns… Gerald Brenan once observed that ‘One of the marks of a great poet is that he creates his own family of words and teaches them to live together in harmony and to help one another.’ And Shakespeare was such a canny harmonist. Boyd has an excellent ear for the sounds and steps of this lineal family, reading the most relevant sonnets persuasively, coaxing out their innuendoes, even their resistances.—Chris Wallace-Crabbe, Australian Book Review

The book showcases Brian Boyd—the Vladimir Nabokov expert and author of the well-received On the Origin of Stories: Evolution, Cognition, and Fiction—in brilliant conversation with Brian Boyd, the voluble and energetic reader of evolutionary biology. Boyd-lit offers subtle and capacious readings of the sonnets’ playfulness, their ways of challenging and attracting four centuries of readers. Boyd-bio explores the affinities between the sonnets and science: from terror management theory to male mating efforts, from cognition research to Maori battle songs… The risky leaps that Boyd-bio takes are breathtaking, and open Shakespeare’s art to fresh enquiry… The admirably informed Boyd-lit offers crisp and clear readings of sonnets… Boyd’s valuable syntheses of literature and science range beyond those of A.N. Whitehead, beyond Nabokov perhaps, and certainly beyond the cutting remarks of scientist T.H. Huxley.—David Gewanter, Times Higher Education

The most illuminating book on Shakespeare’s Sonnets since Helen Vendler’s The Art of Shakespeare’s Sonnets.—Mac Jackson, The University of Auckland

An impressive work of scholarship…a genuinely original and valuable addition to the substantial body of criticism of Shakespeare’s Sonnets.—Stanley Wells

Boyd demonstrates how literary study can, should, and will be done in the future.—Jonathan Gottschall, Washington and Jefferson College

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