more marvelous claims in Wallace Stevens and the Demands of Modernity is that "the linguistic building blocks" of poetry have certain "affective properties" and "philosophical implications" latent within them (115). 1 That is, grammar itself can be affective or philosophical. To explore how this might work in Stevens' poetry, Altieri focuses on a number of grammatical constructions and operators, among them the word "as." He writes:
Philosophy began the 1890s rooted firmly in the monistic absolutism of F.H. Bradley and J.M.E. McTaggart; it ended the decade deracinated into the pluralistic atomism espoused by Bertrand Russell and G.E. Moore. If this intellectual sea change can be conceived as analytic and logical philosophies inventing their wheel, then T.S. Eliot re-invented it as a student of Russell's in the 1910s, when he, too, turned to atomism after growing dissatisfied with Bradley's absolute. But by 1915, Eliot had grown as disenchanted with atomism as he had with absolutism and ultimately charted a course between the two, which he called "relativism." Relativism shines through in Eliot's rejuvenated dedication after 1915 to principles of "organization" that attempt to put an atomized world back together without returning to the unsystematic mysticism of Bradley's original absolute. This attempt -its successes and failures -manifests in the Sweeney poems as a play between formal chaos and order, with poetry itself suspended between these two tendencies.
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