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Emily Dickinson's Rich Conversation: Poetry, Philosophy, Science is a comprehensive account of Emily Dickinson's aesthetic and intellectual life. Through her letters and poems, Richard E. Brantley identifies Dickinson's dialogue with John Locke's rational empiricism, Charles Darwin's evolutionary biology, Wordsworth's 'natural methodism, ' Ralph Waldo Emerson's idealism, and European and American intellectual traditions. Contrary to the image of the isolated poet, this ambitious study reveals Dickinson's agile mind developing through conversation with a community of contemporaries.
The empirical/evangelical dialectic of Romantic Anglo-America culminates in the poetry of Emily Dickinson (1830-86). For example, just as her poems of science and technology reflect her faith in experience, and just as her lyrics about natural history build on this empiricism and develop her commitment to natural religion, so too do her poems of revealed religion constitute her experience of faith. Thus, for an American audience, Dickinson recasts British-Romantic themes of natural and spiritual perception. This double perspective, this counterintuitive combination of natural models with spiritual metaphors, parallels the androgynous ideal of her nineteenth-century feminism and champions her belief in immortality. The experience/faith paradox of her Late-Romantic imagination forms the mind and soul, as well as the heart, of her legacy.
Emily Dickinson's Rich Conversation is a comprehensive account of Emily Dickinson's aesthetic and intellectual life. Contrary to the image of the isolated poet, this ambitious study reveals Dickinson's agile mind developing through conversation with a community of contemporaries.
The empirical/evangelical dialectic of Romantic Anglo-America
culminates in the poetry of Emily Dickinson (1830-86). For example,
just as her poems of science and technology reflect her faith in
experience, and just as her lyrics about natural history build on
this empiricism and develop her commitment to natural religion, so
too do her poems of revealed religion constitute her experience of
faith. Thus, for an American audience, Dickinson recasts
British-Romantic themes of natural and spiritual perception. This
double perspective, this counterintuitive combination of natural
models with spiritual metaphors, parallels the androgynous ideal of
her nineteenth-century feminism and champions her belief in
immortality. The experience/faith paradox of her Late-Romantic
imagination forms the mind and soul, as well as the heart, of her
legacy.
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