Emily Dickinson lived in Amherst, Massachusetts her whole life. We possess some of the hundreds of poems she composed during that life, the first from 1850 and the last from the year of her death in 1886. Much thinking about this body of work has focused on the concision of the poetry, the brief, terse lyrics by which Dickinson expressed her ?multitudes,? in the word of her contemporary, Whitman. Concision is a fine term, having a root in the Latin caedere meaning ?to cut,? with which to introduce a notion of ellipsis. The project underway is to explore what is missing from her poetry and make some generalization about how these absences contribute to the experience of reading it. Ultimately, it will be argued that her conspicuous (and in...
One of the most fascinating aspects of any poet is his conception of his art. Many poets have writte...
Anglo-American Romanticism, beginning with Wordsworth and then beginning again with Emerson, is, in ...
On April 15, 1862, Emily Dickinson asked Thomas Wentworth Higginson of the Atlantic Monthly to confi...
This paper stemmed from a desire to place Dickinson\u27s poetry in conversation within the broader d...
After nearly one hundred years of publication and copious literary criticism, Emily Dickinson remain...
"Emily Dickinson and the Poetry of Silence" explores Emily Dickinson's debate between speaking and s...
As a romantic poet, Emily Dickinson was fascinated by nature, individualism, man\u27s relation with ...
From their first publication in the 1890s until the present, Emily Dickinson\u27s poems have been re...
Emily Dickinson writes numerous poems of what is not there. Her use of negation (not, nor, -less, wi...
This article focuses on the analysis of Emily Dickinson's poems, and the elements of transcendental...
Her letters have been neglected somewhat in Emily Dickinson scholarship, as have nineteenth-century ...
110004868189In Emily Dickinson's poetry the door motif is a favorite and elastic one. Through this d...
Book description: An interdisciplinary examination of the poet, her milieu, and the ways she and her...
The aim of this thesis is to show that Emily Dickinson was not concerned with the publication of her...
Abstract Focusing on poems that observe her own mandate to "Deal with the soul / As with Algebra!" (...
One of the most fascinating aspects of any poet is his conception of his art. Many poets have writte...
Anglo-American Romanticism, beginning with Wordsworth and then beginning again with Emerson, is, in ...
On April 15, 1862, Emily Dickinson asked Thomas Wentworth Higginson of the Atlantic Monthly to confi...
This paper stemmed from a desire to place Dickinson\u27s poetry in conversation within the broader d...
After nearly one hundred years of publication and copious literary criticism, Emily Dickinson remain...
"Emily Dickinson and the Poetry of Silence" explores Emily Dickinson's debate between speaking and s...
As a romantic poet, Emily Dickinson was fascinated by nature, individualism, man\u27s relation with ...
From their first publication in the 1890s until the present, Emily Dickinson\u27s poems have been re...
Emily Dickinson writes numerous poems of what is not there. Her use of negation (not, nor, -less, wi...
This article focuses on the analysis of Emily Dickinson's poems, and the elements of transcendental...
Her letters have been neglected somewhat in Emily Dickinson scholarship, as have nineteenth-century ...
110004868189In Emily Dickinson's poetry the door motif is a favorite and elastic one. Through this d...
Book description: An interdisciplinary examination of the poet, her milieu, and the ways she and her...
The aim of this thesis is to show that Emily Dickinson was not concerned with the publication of her...
Abstract Focusing on poems that observe her own mandate to "Deal with the soul / As with Algebra!" (...
One of the most fascinating aspects of any poet is his conception of his art. Many poets have writte...
Anglo-American Romanticism, beginning with Wordsworth and then beginning again with Emerson, is, in ...
On April 15, 1862, Emily Dickinson asked Thomas Wentworth Higginson of the Atlantic Monthly to confi...