The Seven Deadly Sins: Anthony Hecht’s Emblem Poems

##plugins.pubIds.doi.readerDisplayName##: https://doi.org/10.5209/eiko.77628
Parole chiave: Emblems, Anthony Hecht, Deadly Sins, Gospels, Satire, Poetry

Abstract

Many poets writing after World War II felt a sense of diffidence towards the great ideals of history and religion. They offer a satiric interpretation of their time, and their work often perverts the typological reading of history illustrated in the Bible by opposing the promises of a second coming by Christ with the horrors of the war and the Holocaust, suggesting that the concept of “sacrifice” has no redemptive value. Anthony Hecht, an American post-war formalist, expresses this message through an ekphrastic medium, specifically emblems, inspired by mediaeval culture and Renaissance poetry. One of his early works, The Seven Deadly Sins, in collaboration with the engraver Leonard Baskin, presents a modern collection of emblem poems featuring the figure of Christ, which like the emblematic form can be seen as “word made flesh”. Through their combinations of icons and words, the emblems become the perfect form to assess the dialectical opposition between God and man, body and soul, past and present. 

##submission.viewcitations##

##submission.format##

##submission.crossmark##

##submission.metrics##

Pubblicato
2023-01-28
Come citare
Valli, Elena. «The Seven Deadly Sins: Anthony Hecht’s Emblem Poems». Eikón / Imago 12 (gennaio 28, 2023): 187–210. Consultato luglio 10, 2026. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/EIKO/article/view/77628.
Sezione
Miscellany

Articoli simili

1-10 di 17

Puoi anche Iniziare una ricerca avanzata di similarità per questo articolo.