Our Emily Dickinsons(English, Hardcover, Pollak Vivian R.)

Our Emily Dickinsons(English, Hardcover, Pollak Vivian R.)

  • Pollak Vivian R.
Publisher:University of Pennsylvania PressISBN 13: 9780812248449ISBN 10: 0812248449

Paperback & Hardcover deals ―

Amazon IndiaGOFlipkart ₹ 2480SnapdealGOSapnaOnlineGOJain Book AgencyGOBooks Wagon₹1,471Book ChorGOCrosswordGODC BooksGO

e-book & Audiobook deals ―

Amazon India GOGoogle Play Books GOAudible GO

* Price may vary from time to time.

* GO = We're not able to fetch the price (please check manually visiting the website).

Know about the book -

Our Emily Dickinsons(English, Hardcover, Pollak Vivian R.) is written by Pollak Vivian R. and published by University of Pennsylvania Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0812248449 (ISBN 10) and 9780812248449 (ISBN 13).

For Vivian R. Pollak, Emily Dickinson's work is an extended meditation on the risks of social, psychological, and aesthetic difference that would be taken up by the generations of women poets who followed her. She situates Dickinson's originality in relation to her nineteenth-century audiences, including poet, novelist, and Indian rights activist Helen Hunt Jackson and her controversial first editor, Mabel Loomis Todd, and traces the emergence of competing versions of a brilliant but troubled Dickinson in the twentieth century, especially in the writings of Marianne Moore, Sylvia Plath, and Elizabeth Bishop. Pollak reveals the wide range of emotions exhibited by women poets toward Dickinson's achievement and chronicles how their attitudes toward her changed over time. She contends, however, that they consistently use Dickinson to clarify personal and professional battles of their own. Reading poems, letters, diaries, journals, interviews, drafts of published and unpublished work, and other historically specific primary sources, Pollak tracks nineteenth- and twentieth-century women poets' ambivalence toward a literary tradition that overvalued lyric's inwardness and undervalued the power of social connection. Our Emily Dickinsons places Dickinson's life and work within the context of larger debates about gender, sexuality, and literary authority in America and complicates the connections between creative expression, authorial biography, audience reception, and literary genealogy.