Lydia Sigourney
Editat de Mary Louise Kete, Elizabeth Petrinoen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 apr 2018
This first collection of original essays devoted to the poet's work puts many of the best scholars on Sigourney together in one place and in conversation with one another. The volume includes critical essays examining her literary texts as well as essays that unpack Sigourney's participation in the cultural movements of her day. Holding powerful opinions about the role of women in society, Sigourney was not afraid to advocate against government policies that, in her view, undermined the promise of America, even as she was held up as a paragon of American womanhood and middle-class rectitude. The resulting portrait promises to engage readers who wish to know more about Sigourney's writing, her career, and the causes that inspired her.
Along with the volume editors, contributors include Ann Beebe, Paula Bernat Bennett, Janet Dean, Sean Epstein-Corbin, Annie Finch, Gary Kelly, Paul Lauter, Amy J. Lueck, Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso, Jennifer Putzi, Angela Sorby, Joan Wry, and Sandra Zagarell.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781625343451
ISBN-10: 1625343450
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 2 b&w illus.
Dimensiuni: 163 x 236 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
ISBN-10: 1625343450
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 2 b&w illus.
Dimensiuni: 163 x 236 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Notă biografică
MARY LOUISE KETE is associate professor of English at the University of Vermont. ELIZABETH PETRINO is professor of English literature at Fairfield University.
Cuprins
Acknowledgment
Introduction
Mary Louise Kete and Elizabeth Petrino
1. Lydia Sigourney: From Reinvention to Reconsideration
Mary Louise Kete and Elizabeth Petrino
Part I: Sigourney's Works
2. Remodeling the Kitchen in Parnassus: Sigourney’s Poetics of Collaboration
Jennifer Putzi
3. A Sense of the Material Object: Sigourney’s Fabric Poems
Joan R. Wry
4. Engaging Contradictions: Sigourney’s Sketch of Connecticut, Forty Years Since
Sandra A. Zagarell
5. From “American Hemans” to Global Savant: The Structure of Sentimental Cosmopolitanism in Sigourney’s Pleasant Memories of Pleasant Lands
Sean Epstein-Corbin
6. “you sink the woman, & the wife, in the writer”: Sigourney and the Feminist Literary Atlantic
Gary Kelly
7. Baby to Baby: Sigourney and the Origins of Cuteness
Angela Sorby
Part II: The Work of Sigourney
8. Common Ground: The Figure of the Female Poet in Sigourney’s Lucy Howard’s Journal and E.D.E.N. Southworth’s The Bridal Eve
Ann Beebe
9. “Exil’d murmurings”: “The American Hemans” and the Politics of Displacement
Janet Dean
10. “Several Sigourneys”: Circulation, Reprint Culture, and Sigourney’s Educational Prose
Amy J. Lueck
11. Sigourney’s Poetry of Death
Paul Lauter
12. Teaching through Others: Sigourney, Emerson, and the Didactic Culture of Transcendentalism
Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso
13. Lydia’s Legacy: My Journey as a Postmodern Poetess
Annie Finch
Afterword
Paula Bernat Bennett
Contributors
Index
Introduction
Mary Louise Kete and Elizabeth Petrino
1. Lydia Sigourney: From Reinvention to Reconsideration
Mary Louise Kete and Elizabeth Petrino
Part I: Sigourney's Works
2. Remodeling the Kitchen in Parnassus: Sigourney’s Poetics of Collaboration
Jennifer Putzi
3. A Sense of the Material Object: Sigourney’s Fabric Poems
Joan R. Wry
4. Engaging Contradictions: Sigourney’s Sketch of Connecticut, Forty Years Since
Sandra A. Zagarell
5. From “American Hemans” to Global Savant: The Structure of Sentimental Cosmopolitanism in Sigourney’s Pleasant Memories of Pleasant Lands
Sean Epstein-Corbin
6. “you sink the woman, & the wife, in the writer”: Sigourney and the Feminist Literary Atlantic
Gary Kelly
7. Baby to Baby: Sigourney and the Origins of Cuteness
Angela Sorby
Part II: The Work of Sigourney
8. Common Ground: The Figure of the Female Poet in Sigourney’s Lucy Howard’s Journal and E.D.E.N. Southworth’s The Bridal Eve
Ann Beebe
9. “Exil’d murmurings”: “The American Hemans” and the Politics of Displacement
Janet Dean
10. “Several Sigourneys”: Circulation, Reprint Culture, and Sigourney’s Educational Prose
Amy J. Lueck
11. Sigourney’s Poetry of Death
Paul Lauter
12. Teaching through Others: Sigourney, Emerson, and the Didactic Culture of Transcendentalism
Ricardo Miguel-Alfonso
13. Lydia’s Legacy: My Journey as a Postmodern Poetess
Annie Finch
Afterword
Paula Bernat Bennett
Contributors
Index
Recenzii
“This collection therefore marks not just a new direction in Sigourney scholarship, but a generational shift in the field . . . The essays here reveal a writer who is more aesthetically versatile and socially relevant than either she or her toughest critics have acknowledged.”—American Literary History
“The fruitful critical and cultural work done here. . . extend[s] Sigourney studies beyond recovery to reconsideration.”—Early American Literature
“This book is as necessary as it claims to be. The essays contribute to the ongoing reevaluation of Lydia Sigourney in ways that nothing else has. It is also interesting. Every essay has some compelling information, ideas, and/or questions.”—Legacy: Journal of American Women Writers
“Without question, this new collection makes an immense scholarly contribution to such fields as nineteenth-century American literature, women writers, poetry, and women poets.”—Claudia Stokes, author of Writers in Retrospect: The Rise of American Literary History, 1875–1910
“Lydia Sigourney fills a gaping hole in the field of nineteenth-century American literature and serves both to consolidate and invigorate scholarship on this major poet. In short, this volume is long overdue.”—Augusta Rohrbach, author of Thinking Outside the Book
“The fruitful critical and cultural work done here. . . extend[s] Sigourney studies beyond recovery to reconsideration.”—Early American Literature
“This book is as necessary as it claims to be. The essays contribute to the ongoing reevaluation of Lydia Sigourney in ways that nothing else has. It is also interesting. Every essay has some compelling information, ideas, and/or questions.”—Legacy: Journal of American Women Writers
“Without question, this new collection makes an immense scholarly contribution to such fields as nineteenth-century American literature, women writers, poetry, and women poets.”—Claudia Stokes, author of Writers in Retrospect: The Rise of American Literary History, 1875–1910
“Lydia Sigourney fills a gaping hole in the field of nineteenth-century American literature and serves both to consolidate and invigorate scholarship on this major poet. In short, this volume is long overdue.”—Augusta Rohrbach, author of Thinking Outside the Book