Duty, body, and world in the works of Emily Dickinson : reorganizing the estimate

Bibliographic Information

Duty, body, and world in the works of Emily Dickinson : reorganizing the estimate

Raymond P. Tripp, Jr

(Studies in American literature, v. 32)

E. Mellen Press, c2000

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 293-303) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This study does not "explain away" Emily Dickinson according to this or that school of contemporary criticism or psychological bias, but takes her at her own word as a late transcendental poet. Part One deals with the common fallacies of Dickinson studies, the conflict of world views between critic and poet, and the substitution of biographical speculation for literary criticism. Part Two seeks to engage the substance of what she has to say about life and living it. Part Three presents an interpretation of her style and language for a metaphysical point of view.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 First things: reading a perennial novel
  • poetry and biography
  • poets, poetry and mysticism. Part 2 Three great themes: the knot of duty
  • the knot of names, forms and bodies
  • the knot of the world
  • synonyms for epiphany. Part 3 The supreme oxymoron: transcendental semantics
  • transcendental grammar
  • linguistic metanoia
  • apologia.

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