"Clears away 250 years of debris, and this process of clarification allows us to begin seeing An Essay on Man as if for the first time." --David B. Morris
Why has Alexander Pope's Essay on Man--once hailed by Voltaire as "the most beautiful, most useful, most sublime didactic poem"--fallen into neglect or been dismissed as a philosophical failure? In The Rape of the Text, Harry M. Solomon delivers a bold and necessary corrective to centuries of critical distortion. This groundbreaking study dismantles entrenched misreadings by literary critics, philosophers, and historians, revealing how interpretive traditions have obscured Pope's intent and the richness of his discourse.
Solomon argues that Essay on Man belongs to a "middle-state" Academic Skepticism--a performative, polysemous mode of thought that resists rigid categorization as either philosophy or poetry. By exposing the limitations of logocentric and aesthetic criticism, Solomon offers fresh strategies for reading philosophical poetry as a genre, making this book indispensable for scholars of 18th-century literature, intellectual history, and critical theory.
For readers interested in Pope, Enlightenment thought, or the intersection of literature and philosophy, The Rape of the Text is more than a defense of a single poem--it is a call to rethink how we read works that challenge disciplinary boundaries. Engaging, provocative, and erudite, Solomon's study restores Pope's masterpiece to its rightful place in the canon of ideas.
Related Subjects
Poetry