To develop these claims, we move through three moments: the Romantic foundation (Coleridge), the phenomenological turn (Bachelard, Ricoeur), and the aesthetic-pragmatic extension (Iser, Walton). Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s distinction between fancy and imagination remains the inaugural gesture of modern poetics. In Biographia Literaria (1817), he defines the primary imagination as “the living Power and prime Agent of all human Perception” (Coleridge, 1983, p. 304). Imagination is not a faculty among others; it is the transcendental condition for synthesizing sensory manifold into coherent objects.
In The Rime of the Ancient Mariner , the albatross is not merely a bird but a “Christian soul” because the poem’s imaginative logic fuses natural and moral orders. Coleridge shows that poetic imagination works by coalescing heterogeneous domains—a precursor to conceptual metaphor theory. poetics of imagination
Both Iser and Walton demystify imagination: it is not a mysterious inner flame but a structured, shared capacity to treat representations as invitations to construct worlds. 6. Toward a Systematic Poetics of Imagination Drawing on these traditions, we can outline four operative principles of a poetics of imagination: To develop these claims, we move through three