Emily Dickinson: Personae and Performance

* Emily Dickinson: Personae and Performance ✓ PDF Read by * Elizabeth Phillips eBook or Kindle ePUB Online free. Emily Dickinson: Personae and Performance Margaret andersen said Five Stars. What a fabulous story of true genius.]

Emily Dickinson: Personae and Performance

Author :
Rating : 4.69 (522 Votes)
Asin : 0271006250
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 224 Pages
Publish Date : 2015-08-24
Language : English

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Margaret andersen said Five Stars. What a fabulous story of true genius.

Elizabeth Phillips is Professor Emerita of English at Wake Forest University. . She is the author of Marianne Moore

This should be a valuable book for the Dickinson scholar.. The author challenges many of those interpretations of Dickinson's life and poetry that have become almost standard and universally accepted. In this insightful explication of Dickinson's work, Elizabeth Phillips argues that the Amherst poet 'assumed many personae' and that 'the experiences in the poems are often transformations of episodes in the lives of personal friends, literary characters, and historical figures for whom a fictive 'I' is only a convenient term.' The intention of this book is not strictly biographical, but the life of Dickinson is portrayed and interpreted. Instead of the stereotypical image of Emily Dickinson as the New England Nun, we see instead a real woman living quietly and working hard at home, full of co

--Choice . Phillips challenges many of those interpretations of Dickinson's life and poetry that have become almost standard and universally accepted . Instead of the stereotypical image of Emily Dickinson as the New England Nun, we see instead a real woman living quietly and working hard at home, full of concern for those she loves, deeply affected by the issues of her day, interacting intensely with the world around her through poetry and letters. This is an important book for the Dickinson scholar who will recognize immediately the debates and controversies among Dickinson scholars that Phillips gracefully refers to and very adequately challenges. In this beautifully written, refreshingly insightful explication of Dickinson's work, Phillips argues that the Amherst poet 'assumed many personae,' and that 'the experiences in the poems are often transformations of episodes in the lives of personal friends, literary characters, and historical figures for wh

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