Thursday, February 24, 2005

On Dickinson

part II:

Emily Dickinson -

1. Was an obsessively private person/writer (only seven of her some 1800 poems were published during her lifetime). Dickinson withdrew from social contact at the age of 23 and devoted herself in secret into writing.

2. Around 1850 Dickinson started to write poems, first in fairly conventional style, but after ten years of practice, she began to make room for experiment. From c. 1858, she assembled many of her poems in packets (called 'fascicles'), which she bound herself with needle and thread.

3. After the Civil War (1861-1865), Dickinson restricted her contacts outside her native town of Amherst to the exchange of letters; she dressed only in white and saw few of the visitors who came to meet her. In fact, most of her time she spent in her room.

4. Although she lived a secluded life, her letters reveal knowledge of the writings of John Keats, John Ruskin, and Sir Thomas Browne. Dickinson's emotional life remains mysterious, despite much speculation about a possible disappointed love affair.

5. After Dickinson's death in 1886, her sister Lavinia brought out her poems. She co-edited three volumes from 1891 to 1896. Despite its editorial imperfections, the first volume became popular. In the early decades of the twentieth century, Martha Dickinson Bianchi, the poet's niece, transcribed and published more poems, and in 1945 Bolts Of Melody essentially completed the task of bringing Dickinson's poems to the public. The publication of Thomas H. Johnson's 1955 edition of Emily Dickinson's poems finally gave readers a complete and accurate text.

6. Her frequent use of dashes, sporadic capitalization of nouns, off-rhymes, broken metre, unconventional metaphors have contributed her reputation as one of the most innovative poets of 19th-century American literature. Later feminist critics have challenged the popular conception of the poet as a reclusive, eccentric figure, and underlined her intellectual and artistic sophistication.

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