Poe, Whitman, and Dickinson form an engaging triad of poets who,
considered together, enrich the poetics of each other; the works of
the three poets address language, birth, and scientific aspects of
culture in ways that frame new perceptions of sex roles.
Exacerbating 19th-century American expectations for
sexually-constructed experience, they employ tactics that disrupt
patriarchal signification. The first book to group these three
poets together, this volume examines the daring language
experiments in which they engage. It explores their use of
pseduoscientific and scientific studies of alchemy, hydropathy, and
botany to inform their understanding of language and birth and to
discover expressions that challenge expectations for 19th-century
poetry.
The rising awareness of women's rights, which concurred with the
antebellum call for a new American literature, also informed the
emerging sense of the feminine that prompts the poets to use the
maternal in their poetry. While they do not address the woman
question of the 19th century in concrete ways, they nonetheless
relied upon the female experience of birthing to create a new
relationship with language and to question the nature of
signification.
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