Pleasure Domes and Sunbeams: An Anti-Oedipal Reading of “Kubla Khan” Cover Image

Pleasure Domes and Sunbeams: An Anti-Oedipal Reading of “Kubla Khan”
Pleasure Domes and Sunbeams: An Anti-Oedipal Reading of “Kubla Khan”

Author(s): Robert Tindol
Subject(s): Theoretical Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, Studies of Literature
Published by: Instytut Anglistyki Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Keywords: Coleridge;Romanticism;landscape;

Summary/Abstract: Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s 1797 poem “Kubla Khan” begins with the statement that Kubla Khan once caused a pleasure-dome to come into existence by dint of a kingly decree. The last line states that the narrator, should he gain suffi cient poetic vision, would have “drunk the milk of paradise” and would “build that dome in air.” A new reading may be derived from a focus on precisely what these lines say and what they imply within the perspective of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari’s work Anti-Oedipus. If the process of the narrator’s gaining poetic insight is set in motion by a conscious decree from Kubla Khan, then an Anti-Oedipal reading considers whether the end result is simply the consequence a powerful individual’s wishes, or else is paradoxically a liberation from those wishes.

  • Issue Year: 26/2017
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 55-72
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English