Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. Prynne

Geography’s relation to the creation of a national identity has indelibly influenced different forms of literary writing. In the late capitalist age, the incommensurability of the territorial entity of the nation and physically experienced space cause us to delve deeper into the practices that inter...

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Main Author: Rupsa Banerjee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ratnabali Publisher 2015-01-01
Series:Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
Online Access:http://sanglap-journal.in/index.php/sanglap/article/view/32
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spelling doaj-14e34e39859e4bd5983c27f468a15da32020-11-25T02:50:46ZengRatnabali PublisherSanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry2349-80642015-01-011232Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. PrynneRupsa Banerjee0The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad.Geography’s relation to the creation of a national identity has indelibly influenced different forms of literary writing. In the late capitalist age, the incommensurability of the territorial entity of the nation and physically experienced space cause us to delve deeper into the practices that interpellate us as inhabitants of a democratic nation-space. The scalar fluidity of an individual’s identity is figured by the different ways in which language emulates the social and personal identity of the individual. The virtual nature of the modern democratic state-form where power essentially appears as an empty place is counteracted upon by the poetic language of the late modern British poet J.H. Prynne. Through a study of his two poems (published in the poetry collection Kitchen Poems, 1968) this essay will look into the ways in which individual lives are intertwined with the functioning of economic capital in the state. In an age following the proverbial incursion of the economic into the affective premises of life, Prynne’s language attempts to give agency to the individual caught in the functioning of multiple discourses, separating the everyday from the pervasive abstractions of high finance resource mobilizations. This task of locating the individual’s identity is done by identifying the connections that the individual shares with the land and by uncovering the material basis of political identity.   Keywords: J.H. Prynne; Poetry; Agency; Capital; Subject.http://sanglap-journal.in/index.php/sanglap/article/view/32
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rupsa Banerjee
spellingShingle Rupsa Banerjee
Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. Prynne
Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
author_facet Rupsa Banerjee
author_sort Rupsa Banerjee
title Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. Prynne
title_short Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. Prynne
title_full Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. Prynne
title_fullStr Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. Prynne
title_full_unstemmed Late Capitalism and the Problem of Individual Agency: A Reading of the Poems of J. H. Prynne
title_sort late capitalism and the problem of individual agency: a reading of the poems of j. h. prynne
publisher Ratnabali Publisher
series Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
issn 2349-8064
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Geography’s relation to the creation of a national identity has indelibly influenced different forms of literary writing. In the late capitalist age, the incommensurability of the territorial entity of the nation and physically experienced space cause us to delve deeper into the practices that interpellate us as inhabitants of a democratic nation-space. The scalar fluidity of an individual’s identity is figured by the different ways in which language emulates the social and personal identity of the individual. The virtual nature of the modern democratic state-form where power essentially appears as an empty place is counteracted upon by the poetic language of the late modern British poet J.H. Prynne. Through a study of his two poems (published in the poetry collection Kitchen Poems, 1968) this essay will look into the ways in which individual lives are intertwined with the functioning of economic capital in the state. In an age following the proverbial incursion of the economic into the affective premises of life, Prynne’s language attempts to give agency to the individual caught in the functioning of multiple discourses, separating the everyday from the pervasive abstractions of high finance resource mobilizations. This task of locating the individual’s identity is done by identifying the connections that the individual shares with the land and by uncovering the material basis of political identity.   Keywords: J.H. Prynne; Poetry; Agency; Capital; Subject.
url http://sanglap-journal.in/index.php/sanglap/article/view/32
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