Writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegy

In my dissertation, "Writing with an Iron Pen: Gender and Genre in Early American Elegy," I show how the work of early American women poets engages the same generic questions about the process and use of consolation as modern anti-elegies. The first half of the dissertation focuses on poem...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Delacroix, Julia Penn
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21703
id ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-21703
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-217032015-09-20T17:16:46ZWriting with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegyDelacroix, Julia PennElegyEarly American poetryIn my dissertation, "Writing with an Iron Pen: Gender and Genre in Early American Elegy," I show how the work of early American women poets engages the same generic questions about the process and use of consolation as modern anti-elegies. The first half of the dissertation focuses on poems written by one of America's earliest poets. In chapters one and two I look to the elegies of Anne Bradstreet to show how, from the first book of poems published by an American colonist, women poets have highlighted the limits of the consolatory elegy when either elegist or elegized was not a valued male member of the community. In chapters three and four, I turn to the Age of Revolutions and eighteenth-century poets Hannah Griffitts and Phillis Wheatley. Their elegies, I argue, extend and expand grief even as they refuse the sympathetic identifications that, in contemporary poems, offer opportunities for demonstrations of sympathy key to the earliest formations of American national identity. Ultimately, I suggest, early American women's poetry offers another location from which to contest the problems of affect, power, identity, and community posed by the conventional elegy.text2013-10-23T21:03:43Z2013-052013-06-10May 20132013-10-23T21:03:44Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/21703en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Elegy
Early American poetry
spellingShingle Elegy
Early American poetry
Delacroix, Julia Penn
Writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegy
description In my dissertation, "Writing with an Iron Pen: Gender and Genre in Early American Elegy," I show how the work of early American women poets engages the same generic questions about the process and use of consolation as modern anti-elegies. The first half of the dissertation focuses on poems written by one of America's earliest poets. In chapters one and two I look to the elegies of Anne Bradstreet to show how, from the first book of poems published by an American colonist, women poets have highlighted the limits of the consolatory elegy when either elegist or elegized was not a valued male member of the community. In chapters three and four, I turn to the Age of Revolutions and eighteenth-century poets Hannah Griffitts and Phillis Wheatley. Their elegies, I argue, extend and expand grief even as they refuse the sympathetic identifications that, in contemporary poems, offer opportunities for demonstrations of sympathy key to the earliest formations of American national identity. Ultimately, I suggest, early American women's poetry offers another location from which to contest the problems of affect, power, identity, and community posed by the conventional elegy. === text
author Delacroix, Julia Penn
author_facet Delacroix, Julia Penn
author_sort Delacroix, Julia Penn
title Writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegy
title_short Writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegy
title_full Writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegy
title_fullStr Writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegy
title_full_unstemmed Writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early American elegy
title_sort writing with an iron pen : gender and genre in early american elegy
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21703
work_keys_str_mv AT delacroixjuliapenn writingwithanironpengenderandgenreinearlyamericanelegy
_version_ 1716823256924684288