Blake's Word

Learning to Read, Inner Speech, and the Unsayable

Description

This book explores how William Blake conceived the act of reading as an imaginative activation of Jesus the Word, the anonymous, unsayable potency of language that underlies speech. Through illuminated printing, Blake sought to incarnate this Word by re-educating his late-Enlightened audience in the fundamentals of reading – not through morality tales but at the level of physiology and synaesthesia where seen writing is turned into meaningful mental sounds. By wrongfooting the automaticity of skilled adult parsing, Blake’s grammar and syntax restore a cognitive element of anticipation to semiotic decoding and prophetically open the immediate future to interpretation. Such speaking-forth of the divine unsayability not only critiques 18th-century Deism’s God-given “language of nature,” it also sometimes skirts unreadability. Therefore, as this study demonstrates, Blake strove hard to develop his reading program in relation to a range of well-known philosophers including Plato and Bacon, Berkeley and Hume, Swedenborg and Rousseau, whose ideas on cognition and language his work casts in a new light even today. Andrew M. Cooper retired from the University of Texas at Austin, USA, in 2013. His most recent books are A Bastard Kind of Reasoning: William Blake and Geometry (2023) and William Blake and the Productions of Time (2013).
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Writer
Cooper, Andrew M.
Title
Blake's Word
Publisher
Springer International Publishing AG
Year
2026
Language
English
Pages
304
EAN
9783031965739
Binding format
Hardback

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