The Collected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe, EAP: Eureka (2004), title page and table of contents


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Title page:

 

 

Edgar Allan Poe

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EUREKA

Edited with an Introduction,

Notes, and Textual Variants by

STUART LEVINE AND

SUSAN F. LEVINE

UNIVERSITY OF ILLIONOIS PRESS

Urbana and Chicago

[[2004]]

 

 



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Table of Contents

[page v, unnumbered:]

CONTENTS

                             Page
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS    vii
INTRODUCTION    xi
ABBREVIATIONS FOR BOOKS AND AUTHORITIES CITED    xxix
EDITORIAL METHOD    xxxi
EUREKA: A Prose Poem    1
PREFACE    5
EUREKA: An Essay on the Material and Spiritual Universe    7
[[EUREKA: section 01    7]]
[[EUREKA: section 02    17]]
[[EUREKA: section 03    28]]
[[EUREKA: section 04    40]]
[[EUREKA: section 05    49]]
[[EUREKA: section 06    62]]
[[EUREKA: section 07    72]]
[[EUREKA: section 08    84]]
[[EUREKA: section 09    95]]
APPENDIX: POE'S POSTSCRIPT TO A LETTER ABOUT THE LECTURE “EUREKA’    107
[[headnote and notes on text    107]]
[[Postscript to a Letter about the Lecture “EUREKA”    108]]
NOTES TO Eureka AND POE'S POSTSCRIPT    117
[[Notes (title, preface, and sections 01-04)    117]]
[[Notes (sections 05-09)    139]]
[[Notes (Appendix)    167]]
BIBLIOGRAPHY    169
INDEX    177

 


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The following text appears on the dust jacket:

[[Inside front of cover:]]

Eureka

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EDGAR ALLAN POE

Edited with an Introduction, Notes,

and Textual Variants by Stuart Levine

and Susan F Levine

Originally published in 1848, Eureka is Poe's book on how the universe was formed, how it functions, and what its future might be. Poe provides a physical, scientific explanation for the interconnectedness of all things — an idea at the heart of much of nineteenth-century romanticism and American Transcendentalism in particular.

This user-friendly edition puts Eureka in context, explaining Poe's excellent grasp of then-new developments in astronomy, his often-prescient considerations of what was known and what might come next (Poe is especially good on space-time), and the close connections between Eureka and the thought and attitudes of his era.

Through extensive annotations this edition of Eureka demonstrates intimate connections with Poe's poetry, fiction, and criticism; with his career and aspirations, his humor and satire; and with his love of grand literary effects.

It also presents a carefully edited text, including Poe's own emendations from several copies which he marked for the revised reprinting that he hoped would follow, and related documents.

[[Inside rear of cover:]]

EDGAR ALLAN POE (1809-49), preeminent American writer and literary critic, exerted a worldwide influence on literature through his short fiction and his theoretical statements on poetry and the short story.

STUART LEVINE is founding chair of the American studies department at the University of Kansas. He is the author or editor of nine books, including Edgar Poe, Seer and Craftsman, and the founder of American Studies, which he edited for thirty years.

SUSAN F. LEVINE served as assistant dean of the Graduate School at the University of Kansas. She is the author of articles on Latin American writers. Together with Stuart Levine, she is coeditor of The Short Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe and coauthor of articles on Poe's work.

[[Outside, rear of cover:]]

Eureka

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EDGAR ALLAN POE

Edited with an Introduction, Notes, and Textual Variants

by Stuart Levine and Susan F Levine

“Outside France [Eureka] ... has been neglected, but I do not think Poe was wrong in the importance he attached to it... . [I] t was a very daring and original notion to take the oldest of the poetic themes — older even than the story of the epic hero — ... and treat it in an absolutely contemporary way... . Secondly, it is full of remarkable intuitive guesses that subsequent scientific discoveries have confirmed.”

— W. H. Auden

[Eureka embodies] “an affirmation of the symmetrical and reciprocal relationship of matter, time, space, gravity, and light... . [Poe] has built an abstract poem, one of the rare modern examples of a total explanation of the material and spiritual universe, a cosmogony. It belongs to a department of literature remarkable for its persistence and astonishing in its variety; cosmogony is one of the oldest literary forms.”

— Paul Valery

Eureka ... is a work which refuses to be confined within the arbitrary definitions of a genre. [Poe himself called Eureka] ... ‘A Prose Poem,’... ‘An Essay on the Material and Spiritual Universe,’... a ‘Book of Truths,’... and an ‘Art-Product alone,’ adding that it should also be taken as ‘A Romance; or if I not be urging too lofty a claim, as a Poem.’ ”

— Barton Levi St. Armand

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS

Urbana and Chicago www.press.uillinois.edu


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Notes:

All material in this edition is protected by copyright, exclusively held by the the University of Illionis. Permission has been obtained by the Poe Society of Baltimore from the University of Illionis to provide this electronic edition for academic and research purposes only. (Permission was also obtained from the editors, personally.) The Poe Society of Baltimore asks all users of this material to respect these copyrights, and not to exceed what would typically be considered as fair use (generally interpreted as selective quotations and/or paraphrasing of only a small percentage of the total material, and with the appropriate attribution and citation).

Although Poe's writings are essentially in the public domain, the texts presented here embody often painstaking editorial work by Stuart Levine and Susan Levine, and that editorial work is protected by copyright. The introductory material, descriptions, annotations, and the apparatus of texts and variants are the editor's original work, and are even more clearly subject to copyright.

The text for this electronic version of the book was taken from an original printed form, revised for XHTML/CSS and to follow our own formatting preferences. Pagination of the original edition has been included.

The table of contents is a reasonable representation of the table of contents from the original printing. Individual sub-entries have been added for Eureka for the sake of breaking up a long text, and to conform to the other online texts we provide. In most other respects, it has followed the form of the original.


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[S:0 - SSLER, 2004] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Works - Editions - The Collected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe - EAP: Eureka (2004)