Allen Tate: Tension, for B.A. 6th Semester

Allen Tate: Tension, supported by Podmeswar

The concept of tension in imaginative literature is found at many points in modern criticism and aesthetic theory. This, for example, is a statement by John Dewey: “Without internal tension, there would be a fluid rush to a straightway mark, there would be nothing that could be called development and fulfillment. The existence of resistance defines the place of intelligence in the production of an object.”
The concept of tension is related to the organic theory of poetry and fiction especially to the part of theory that emphasizes the place of mind and intelligence in imaginative literature. The criticism preoccupied with or aware of tension in imaginative literature tries to define the relationship between intelligence and the medium to demonstrate and to evaluate the ways in which an idea is reconciled with another idea and the appropriateness with which all of it is expressed in its medium.
Allen Tate, in ‘Tension in poetry’ has given a somewhat special meaning to the term which he derives by lopping the prefixes off the logical extension and intension.’ Tate looks, for example at The Vine by James Thompson:
            “The wine of love in music
            And the feast of love is song
            ……………………………
……………………………”
The language here appeals to an existing effective state as it has no coherent meaning either literally or in terms of ambiguity or implication, it may be wholly replaced by one of its several paraphrases which are already latent in our mind.
            Tate gives an example of his ‘poetic touchstone’ in which we find present such tension. In the third part of his essay Tate gives a target from Durante Alighieri’s ‘Inferno’ as an instance of tension.


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