Realism in Wallace Stevens' Poetry
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Department of English
Abstract
The main objective of this study is to show how Wallace Stevens is handling
realism to provide real pictures to the readers in his poems. Stevens rejects all notions
of a fixed, stable reality. The external world, according to Stevens, is in a state of
constant flux. As we are parts of this world, we can only affirm the reality by flowing
with its flow. Poetry is the good embodiment of such a flowing. He rejects the
orthodox Christian conception of paradise in favour of a secular paradise. The
heavenly paradise as conceived by orthodox Christianity is only an illusion. Stevens,
as a realist, gives objective presentation of details rather than a subjective
concentration on personal feelings and imaginings. He presents unvarnished truth
without regard to ideals or romance in his poems. There is a tendency to posit human
beings in the center in his poems. Humans have a certain degree of free will that they
can exercise to affect their situations. Therefore, Stevens' poems give the beautiful
pictures of the socio-cultural realities of his time.