In 1862, Emily Dickinson initiated a correspondence with Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a prominent man of letters and radical reformer whose essays she had read and admired. Much existing biographical work on Dickinson intends to construct a definitive figure out of a woman whose self-representation was intentionally elusive, thanks in part to her limited self-publication. But the poet\u27s biographical image owes as well to those who managed the posthumous appearance of her work, particularly Higginson. How did Higginson\u27s own ambitions and expectations for The American Literary Woman, a role he helped script, inform his treatment of Dickinson, the self-professed only Kangaroo among the Beauty, a woman who stubbornly enacted and encoded...