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The Oxford Handbook of Emily Dickinson is designed to engage,
inform, interest, and delight students and scholars of Emily
Dickinson, of nineteenth-century US literature and cultural
studies, of American poetry, and of the lyric. It also establishes
potential agendas for future work in the field of Dickinson
studies. This is the first collection on Dickinson to foreground
the material and social culture of her time while opening new
windows to interpretive possibility in ours. The volume strives to
balance Dickinson's own center of gravity in the material culture
and historical context of nineteenth-century Amherst with the
significance of important critical conversations of our present,
thus understanding her poetry with the broadest "Latitude of
Home"-as she puts it in her poem "Forever-is composed of Nows."
Debates about the lyric, about Dickinson's manuscripts and
practices of composition, about the viability of translation across
language, media, and culture, and about the politics of class,
gender, place, and race circulate through this volume. These
debates matter to our moment but also to our understanding of hers.
Although rooted in the evolving history of Dickinson criticism, the
chapters foreground truly new original research and a wide range of
innovative critical methodologies, including artistic responses to
her poetry by musicians, visual artists, and other poets. The
suppleness and daring of Dickinson's thought and uses of language
remain open to new possibilities and meanings, even while they are
grounded in contexts from over 150 years ago, and this collection
expresses and celebrates the breadth of her accomplishments and
relevance.
In this striking study of the pre-Civil War literary imagination,
Karen Sanchez-Eppler charts how bodily difference came to be
recognized as a central problem for both political and literary
expression. Her readings of sentimental anti-slavery fiction, slave
narratives, and the lyric poetry of Walt Whitman and Emily
Dickinson demonstrate how these texts participated in producing a
new model of personhood-one in which the racially distinct and
physically constrained slave body converged alongside the sexually
distinct and domestically circumscribed female body. Moving from
the public domain of abolitionist politics to the privacy of lyric
poetry, Sanchez-Eppler argues that attention to the physical body
blurs the boundaries between public and private. Drawing analogies
between black and female bodies, feminist-abolitionists use the
public sphere of anti-slavery politics to write about sexual
desires and anxieties they cannot voice directly. However,
Sanchez-Eppler warns against exaggerating the positive links
between literature and politics. She finds that the relationships
between feminism and abolitionism reveal patterns of exploitation,
appropriation, and displacement of the black body that acknowledge
the difficulties in embracing "difference" in the nineteenth
century as in the twentieth. Her insightful examination of these
issues makes a distinctive mark within American literary and
cultural studies. This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived
program, which commemorates University of California Press's
mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them
voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893,
Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship
accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title
was originally published in 1993.
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