The new Emily Dickinson studies
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The new Emily Dickinson studies
(Twenty-first century critical revisions)
Cambridge University Press, 2019
Available at 5 libraries
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  Nagano
  Gifu
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  Kyoto
  Osaka
  Hyogo
  Nara
  Wakayama
  Tottori
  Shimane
  Okayama
  Hiroshima
  Yamaguchi
  Tokushima
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  Kochi
  Fukuoka
  Saga
  Nagasaki
  Kumamoto
  Oita
  Miyazaki
  Kagoshima
  Okinawa
  Korea
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  United Kingdom
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This collection presents new approaches to Emily Dickinson's oeuvre. Informed by twenty-first-century critical developments, the Dickinson that emerges here is embedded in and susceptible to a very physical world, and caught in unceasing interactions and circulation that she does not control. The volume's essays offer fresh readings of Dickinson's poetry through such new critical lenses as historical poetics, ecocriticism, animal studies, sound studies, new materialism, posthumanism, object-oriented feminism, disability studies, queer theory, race studies, race and contemporary poetics, digital humanities, and globalism. These essays address what it means to read Dickinson in braille, online, graffitied, and internationally, alongside the work of poets of color. Taken together, this book widens our understanding of Dickinson's readerships, of what the poems can mean, and for whom.
Table of Contents
- Introduction Michelle Kohler
- Part I. Poetics and the Imagination: 1. Collaborative Dickinson Alexandra Socarides
- 2. Generic Dickinson Michael C. Cohen
- 3. 'Success in Circuit Lies': Dickinson, media, and imagination Eliza Richards
- 4. Dickinson and sound Christina Pugh
- Part II. Theoretical Frameworks: 5. Dickinson's object-oriented feminism Michelle Kohler
- 6. 'The Vision - pondered long': Dickinson, chronic pain, and the materiality of figuration Michael Snediker
- 7. Dickinson's posthuman worlds: biopoetics and environmental subjectivity Colleen Glenney Boggs
- 8. Dickinson and historical ecopoetics Gillian Kidd Osborne
- Part III. Nineteenth-Century Histories: 9. Dickinson's physics Cody Marrs
- 10. Dickinson's geographical poetics Grant Rosson
- 11. Global Dickinson Paraic Finnerty
- 12. Dickinson and George Moses Horton Faith Barrett
- 13. Dickinson and the diary Desiree Henderson
- Part IV. Receptions, Archives, Readerships: 14. Textures newly visible: the online Dickinson archives Seth Perlow
- 15. Coloring Dickinson: race, influence, and lyric dis-reading Evie Shockley
- 16. Dickinson, disability, and a crip editorial practice Clare Mullaney
- 17. Emily Dickinson in Baghdad Naseer Hassan
- Bibliography
- Index.
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