Spaces of origin: Figures of the archetypal feminine in Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Crane, and Bishop

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Publication Type honors thesis
School or College College of Humanities
Department English
Thesis Supervisor Brooke Hopkins
Honors Advisor/Mentor Brooke Hopkins
Creator Gully, Jennifer Elisabeth
Title Spaces of origin: Figures of the archetypal feminine in Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Crane, and Bishop
Date 1994-06
Year graduated 1994
Description Despite the fact that the lives of William Wordsworth, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Keats, Hart Crane, and Elizabeth Bishop are separated by about a century, their poems resonate with strikingly similar images of the feminine archetype and the nature of poetic writing. It is seemingly through encounters with the feminine, troped as maternal figures and womb-like spaces of protean shapes, that the poet-speakers in selected poems find their creativity and poetic voices. For Wordsworth, these encounters with the feminine, like the mutually creative relationships we have as infants with our mothers, are benign. But they aren't always experienced that way. The male-poet speakers in Shelley's, Keat's, and Crane's writing consider themselves physically or psychologically threatened by such encounters, and Bishop's female poet-speaker at least recognizes the danger inherent in them. The feminine space that nurtures their poetic voices also has the potential to destroy them. Poetry seems to emerge from, or be the product of, a paradoxical space where meaning and images vacillate. At the same time, it becomes precisely that--a space where the meaning of words and images continually move. Thus, when we read a poem, it would seem that we enter a feminine space, as it were, much as its author did. And what we find there is, in part, the result of our creative engagement with the linguistic landscape before us just as the very poem we read is the result of the poet's creative engagement with the mental landscape before him or her.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Wordsworth, William, 1770-1850 - Criticism and interpretation; Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 1792-1822 - Criticism and interpretation; Keats, John, 1795-1821 - Criticism and interpretation; Crane, Hart, 1899-1932 - Criticism and interpretation; Bishop, Elizabeth, 1911-1979 - Criticism and interpretation; Women in literature
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Jennifer Elisabeth Gully
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s6g48sjz
Setname ir_htca
ID 1314747
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6g48sjz
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