Het poëtisch accent. Drie literaire genres in zeventiende-eeuwse Nederlandse pamfletten

'The poetic accent. Three literary genres in seventeenth-century Dutch pamphlets' focuses on the way the conviction works, by studying pamphlets containing sonnets, songs and echo-poetry. I distinguish between structural and affective functions of poetry. Within the composition of a pamphlet, poetry was often given an exordial or perorational function. Poetry before the main text was well suited to portray the author in a good way, to deliver the message of the pamphlet as a kind of device and to help the reader with his interpretation. A poem could also function perorational as a summary of t... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Vrieler, J.A.
Dokumenttyp: Dissertation
Erscheinungsdatum: 2007
Schlagwörter: Letteren / pamphlets / poetry / literature / sonnet / song / echo-poetry / rhetorics
Sprache: Niederländisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26767294
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/19082

'The poetic accent. Three literary genres in seventeenth-century Dutch pamphlets' focuses on the way the conviction works, by studying pamphlets containing sonnets, songs and echo-poetry. I distinguish between structural and affective functions of poetry. Within the composition of a pamphlet, poetry was often given an exordial or perorational function. Poetry before the main text was well suited to portray the author in a good way, to deliver the message of the pamphlet as a kind of device and to help the reader with his interpretation. A poem could also function perorational as a summary of the main text, or as an emotional repetition of the message of the main text. Concerning the affective functions, hardly any neutral or reporting poetry can be found. Most poems have a persuasive function. They can be divided into two groups. The first contains occasional poetry that praises deceased people or poetry that sings about certain festivities and usually follows the known patterns from the funeral or panegyric poetry. The second group is more capricious and differ from the first group because more than in the first category of persuasive poetry an appeal is made to the reader. To call poetry in pamphlets polemic, they have to be part of an ongoing polemic discussion, in which several pamphlets present different views on the same subject. It is characterized by an extensive use of accusing and slandering tactics. Polemic poetry often contains intertextuality. It is credible that polemics aimed at more extreme effects and because of that a certain arsenal of rhetoric weapons was used. The diverting function of poetry in pamphlets can either serve the persuasive or polemic function, or it can be a goal in itself. When the diverting function serves the persuasive or polemic function, it can do so in various ways. First, certain literary elements can be prominent and draw attention to themselves. The second manner in which poetry can have a diverting function in pamphlets, is when poetry is used to vary, or interrupt ...