The veiled mirror and the woman poet: H.D., Louise Bogan, Elizabeth Bishop, and Louise Gluck

1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (09) ◽  
pp. 30-4847-30-4847
1994 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 186
Author(s):  
Katharine Rodier ◽  
Elizabeth Dodd ◽  
Betsy Erkkila

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. SV33-SV56
Author(s):  
Carmen Bonasera

Far from being a mere thematic device, the body plays a crucial role in poetry, especially for modern women poets. The inward turn to an intimate autobiographical dimension, which is commonly seen as characteristic of female writing, usually complies with the requests of feminist theorists, urging writers to reconquer their identity through the assertion of their bodies. However, inscribing the body in verse is often problematic, since it frequently emerges from a complicated interaction between positive self-redefinition, life writing, and the confession of trauma. This is especially true for authors writing under the influence of the American confessional trend, whose biographies were often scarred by mental illness and self-destructive inclinations. This paper assesses the role of the body in the representation of the self in a selection of texts by American women poets—namely Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Elizabeth Bishop, Adrienne Rich, and Louise Glück—where the body and its disclosure act as vehicles for a heterogeneous redefinition of the female identity.


PMLA ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 113 (2) ◽  
pp. 243-257
Author(s):  
David R. Jarraway

A general reluctance to engage the issue of lesbian identity in Elizabeth Bishop's work has understandably been conditioned by her own longstanding reticence. An approach that theorizes about the nonreferential, hence inarticulable, contours of Bishop's project, however, discloses a more eroticized aesthetic practice—one conceivably enabling the vital exploration of transgressive sexuality that perhaps goes without saying. What arguably forges the link between theory and practice is Bishop's experience of loss. The unspeakableness of mother loss due to insanity, mediated poignantly by the curtailment of Bishop's Canadian childhood, formerly provided the invitation to enclose Bishop's writing explicitly within a lifelong travail of itinerant displacement. Recent psychoanalytic theory, by contrast, foregrounds a more challenging loss that divides her writing between reality and the real and thus implicitly opens it up to a spectral lesbian poetics beyond what her canonical “American” identity readily permits readers to see and to say.


1977 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 33
Author(s):  
Candace Slater
Keyword(s):  

1977 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eleanor Ross Taylor
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-74
Author(s):  
Christopher Laverty

This essay examines the influence of Elizabeth Bishop on Seamus Heaney’s poetics in the 1980s and 1990s as he became a global poet. She stands as a unique and overlooked exemplar in Heaney’s poetic pantheon. His reading of Bishop’s work, for all its limitations, nonetheless enables some of his most celebrated poetry of “home.” Since the 1990s, Bishop’s reputation has grown considerably, and recent critical assessments of newly published work have led to new ways of reading her older collections, so that the “reticence” for which she was famed now appears less as an aesthetic principle—as Heaney understands it—than as a concession to a repressive environment. Through intertextual close-readings alongside an examination of Heaney’s literarycritical responses to her work, this essay argues Heaney’s view of Bishop is often refracted through the lens of his own concerns. Ultimately, however, that view helps Heaney develop a poetics where form itself—the essential border-making and border-crossing apparatus—is emblematic of a solution to political crisis, making his misreading a highly productive one.


2011 ◽  
Vol 85 (6) ◽  
pp. 16-16
Author(s):  
Alistair Noon
Keyword(s):  

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