An American Triptych: Anne Bradstreet, Emily Dickinson, Adrienne RichUNC Press Books, 1984 - 272 Seiten Anne Bradstreet, Emily Dickinson, and Adrienne Rich share nationality, gender, and an aesthetic tradition, but each expresses these experiences in the context of her own historical moment. Puritanism imposed stringent demands on Bradstreet, romanticism bo |
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Seite
... " Were earthly comforts permanent " 67 PART TWO Emily Dickinson : “ A Woman - white — to be ” Introduction 79 SIX " The Soul selects her own Society " 84 SEVEN " Your Wayward Scholar " 99 EIGHT " A Word made Flesh " NINE " Earth.
... " Were earthly comforts permanent " 67 PART TWO Emily Dickinson : “ A Woman - white — to be ” Introduction 79 SIX " The Soul selects her own Society " 84 SEVEN " Your Wayward Scholar " 99 EIGHT " A Word made Flesh " NINE " Earth.
Seite 3
... society in which they lived . In the past decade , feminist criticism has been concerned with the spe- cial issues of the female imagination and the profession of the woman writer ; several feminist studies have concentrated on British ...
... society in which they lived . In the past decade , feminist criticism has been concerned with the spe- cial issues of the female imagination and the profession of the woman writer ; several feminist studies have concentrated on British ...
Seite 4
... society that needed its cohesive religious ideals to survive the New World rigors . Faith in God's providential plan sustained the " errand into the wilderness " and enabled the Puritans to endure the harsh conditions of New England ...
... society that needed its cohesive religious ideals to survive the New World rigors . Faith in God's providential plan sustained the " errand into the wilderness " and enabled the Puritans to endure the harsh conditions of New England ...
Seite 9
... society that was hostile to the imagination . Her voice was sometimes subdued by religious concerns ; nevertheless , she was able to express the range of her feelings . Dickinson exercised extraordinary emotional and aesthetic freedom ...
... society that was hostile to the imagination . Her voice was sometimes subdued by religious concerns ; nevertheless , she was able to express the range of her feelings . Dickinson exercised extraordinary emotional and aesthetic freedom ...
Seite 10
... society . All three poets have protested , to varying degrees , the disjunction of mind and na- ture that characterizes Judeo - Christian thought . The work of Bradstreet , Dickinson , and Rich suggests a female poetic in which nature ...
... society . All three poets have protested , to varying degrees , the disjunction of mind and na- ture that characterizes Judeo - Christian thought . The work of Bradstreet , Dickinson , and Rich suggests a female poetic in which nature ...
Inhalt
I found a new world | 20 |
The Tenth Muse | 37 |
Be still thou unregenerate part | 49 |
The Rising Self | 58 |
Were earthly comforts permanent | 67 |
Introduction | 79 |
The Soul selects her own Society | 84 |
Your Wayward Scholar | 99 |
Introduction | 167 |
Find Yourself and You Find the World | 173 |
Visionary Anger Cleansing My Sight | 188 |
A Whole New Poetry Beginning Here | 202 |
A Wild Patience Has Taken Me This Far | 217 |
A New Relation to the Universe | 227 |
Notes | 235 |
261 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
An American Triptych: Anne Bradstreet, Emily Dickinson, and Adrienne Rich Wendy Martin Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2016 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept Adrienne Rich Allen Ginsberg American Amherst anger Anne Bradstreet Anne Hutchinson Antinomians artistic Austin body Boston Bowles Brad Cambridge church Colony conflict consciousness contrast Cotton Mather create critics culture daughter death Dickin divine domestic earth Edward Dickinson effort Elizabeth Emerson Emily Dickinson emotional emphasizes England eternal experience explore express father fear feel female feminine feminism feminist flowers friends Gelpi God's Harvard University Press heaven Higginson Hours of Emily human husband Ibid images John John Winthrop language Lavinia letter Leyda literary lives male masculine Massachusetts metaphors mother nature nineteenth-century nurturing observes patriarchal poem poetic political Puritan relationship religious Rich's Rich's Poetry role romantic salvation Sandra Gilbert sexual Simon Bradstreet sister social society soul spirit stanza struggle Tenth Muse Thomas Dudley thou tion traditional Victorian vision W. W. Norton Whitman's wife William Carlos Williams Winthrop woman wrote York
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The Wicked Sisters: Women Poets, Literary History, and Discord Betsy Erkkila Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1992 |