Wallace Stevens & the FeminineMelita Schaum American poet Wallace Stevens has been at the centre of most major critical controversies of the 20th century, from the early emergence of New Criticism through the past decade's battles over poststructuralism. This collection of 10 essays by scholars of Stevens and modernism explores various aspects of the feminine in Steven's writings and his life. Together, the essays demonstrate how a focus on gender provides new insights into Steven's poetry and life, and new perspectives on the nature of language and poetic voice, the social and cultural shaping of American poetry and the viability of current critical debates. |
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Page 156
... believe that Stevens or other poets had a social and moral obligation to use their art to affect political action , to alleviate suffering , to feed those who were hungry . In short , Moore echoed Stevens ' statements in the thirties ...
... believe that Stevens or other poets had a social and moral obligation to use their art to affect political action , to alleviate suffering , to feed those who were hungry . In short , Moore echoed Stevens ' statements in the thirties ...
Page 185
... believe in them , as they believe in elves and gods , to make real their lives . " 29 Stevens , too , has called money " a kind of poetry " ( OP , 165 ) , and in " Poetic Acts " he goes so far as to label modern national economy a ...
... believe in them , as they believe in elves and gods , to make real their lives . " 29 Stevens , too , has called money " a kind of poetry " ( OP , 165 ) , and in " Poetic Acts " he goes so far as to label modern national economy a ...
Page 191
... believe that lack of success in the political and economic world marks writing as an idle pastime . The argument is pointed , because Emerson himself never forgets that poetry does not yield economic power : " There are not in the world ...
... believe that lack of success in the political and economic world marks writing as an idle pastime . The argument is pointed , because Emerson himself never forgets that poetry does not yield economic power : " There are not in the world ...
Contents
Sister of the Minotaur | 3 |
Stevens and the Mythology of Gender | 23 |
A Woman with the Hair | 46 |
Copyright | |
9 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Aeschylus American angel appears argues become beginning believe body calls central clear Collected Complete critical culture death desire difference distance early earth Emerson essays example experience expression face fact fall father feeling female feminine fiction figure final gender give human idea Ideas of Order imagination individual interior paramour language later less letter light lines literary living look male marriage maternal means metaphor Milton mind Moore mother move muse myth nature never Notes object once opening original paramour perhaps poem poet poet's poetic poetry politics possible presence proper reading reality reference reflection relation remains represents resistance seems sense sexual social soul speak suggests things thought tion tradition turn University Press voice Wallace Stevens wife Wisdom woman women writing York