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Gender and History in Yeats's Love Poetry

Gender and History in Yeats's Love Poetry

285 kr

285 kr

På lager

Fr., 11 april - on., 16 april


Sikker betaling

14 dagers åpent kjøp


Selges og leveres av

Adlibris


Produktbeskrivelse

In this, the first sustained feminist analysis of Yeats, Elizabeth Butler Cullingford resituates his love poems in their cultural and historical context. Yeats himself said that when he started to write verse, "no matter how I begin, it becomes love poetry." Cullingford argues that the politics of sexuality are at the heart of his creative enterprise. From the early lyrics prompted by his frustrated love for Maud
Gonne through later works such as "Leda and the Swan," "Among School Children," and the Crazy Jane sequence, she traces the complex intersections between history, aesthetics, and desire.

Cullingford shows how women's demand for emancipation brought pressure to bear on the conventions of love poetry, which idealize woman as an aesthetic object; and how Yeats's revision of
these formal conventions modifies his idea of the Irish nation, which has traditionally been represented as female. Yeats described himself as "a man of my time, through my poetical faculty living its history": his love poetry bears the impress of the shifting balance of sexual power and the struggle to define a postcolonial Irish identity.

Artikkel nr.

4f52bff2-86e6-59dc-9573-f516eb622140

Gender and History in Yeats's Love Poetry

285 kr

285 kr

På lager

Fr., 11 april - on., 16 april


Sikker betaling

14 dagers åpent kjøp


Selges og leveres av

Adlibris