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Letters of Emily Dickinson [Hardback]

4.42/5 (248 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 976 pages, height x width x depth: 235x156x39 mm, weight: 1376 g, 18 photos
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Apr-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674982975
  • ISBN-13: 9780674982970
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 39,92 €*
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 976 pages, height x width x depth: 235x156x39 mm, weight: 1376 g, 18 photos
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Apr-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674982975
  • ISBN-13: 9780674982970
An edition of Emily Dickinson’s correspondence, expanded and revised for the first time in over 60 years. Illustrations.

The Letters of Emily Dickinson collects, redates, and recontextualizes all of the poet’s extant letters, including dozens newly discovered or never before anthologized. Insightful annotations emphasize not the reclusive poet of myth but rather an artist firmly embedded in the political and literary currents of her time.

The definitive edition of Emily Dickinson’s correspondence, expanded and revised for the first time in over sixty years.

Emily Dickinson was a letter writer before she was a poet. And it was through letters that she shared prose reflections—alternately humorous, provocative, affectionate, and philosophical—with her extensive community. While her letters often contain poems, and some letters consist entirely of a single poem, they also constitute a rich genre all their own. Through her correspondence, Dickinson appears in her many facets as a reader, writer, and thinker; social commentator and comedian; friend, neighbor, sister, and daughter.

The Letters of Emily Dickinson is the first collected edition of the poet’s correspondence since 1958. It presents all 1,304 of her extant letters, along with the small number available from her correspondents. Almost 300 are previously uncollected, including letters published after 1958, letters more recently discovered in manuscript, and more than 200 “letter-poems” that Dickinson sent to correspondents without accompanying prose. This edition also redates much of her correspondence, relying on records of Amherst weather patterns, historical events, and details about flora and fauna to locate the letters more precisely in time. Finally, updated annotations place Dickinson’s writing more firmly in relation to national and international events, as well as the rhythms of daily life in her hometown. What emerges is not the reclusive Dickinson of legend but a poet firmly embedded in the political and literary currents of her time.

Dickinson’s letters shed light on the soaring and capacious mind of a great American poet and her vast world of relationships. This edition presents her correspondence anew, in all its complexity and brilliance.

Recenzijas

[ This] new monumental volume of Dickinson's letters, the first in over 60 years, gives us an engaged Emily Dickinson, a woman in conversation with the world through gossip, as well as remarks about books, politics and the signal events of her age, particularly the Civil Warreads like the closest thing we'll probably ever have to an intimate autobiography of the poet. -- Maureen Corrigan * Fresh Air * There has never been a better time to revisit and restore the authors charismatic, sensitive, and characteristically brilliant proseWhat is made plain in these letters is that the reality is far more wondrous than the prefab myth of Dickinson that has so long existed, in part, to rationalize how so extraordinary a mind could come by its power. -- Maya C. Popa * Poetry Foundation * A new, definitive edition that collects, reorders, and freshly annotates every surviving letter that Dickinson sent (or drafted) to someone else, along with the handful of surviving messages that she received. -- Kamran Javadizadeh * New Yorker * The concentrated intensity with which[ Dickinson] produced[ her] best work has the quality of a natural phenomenon: a butterfly migration, or a swarm of plankton ablaze with bioluminescence. To read The Letters of Emily Dickinson is to experience this phenomenon in real-time. -- Claire Lowdon * The Spectator * MonumentalMiller and Mitchell can be proud of the work they have done collating, checking and sometimes redating the letters (ingeniously using Amherst weather records, among other sources). Their new presentation of Dickinsons letters will send you back to the poems with fresh eyes, and make you wonder afresh too about the dazzling, challenging writer behind them. -- Claire Harman * Literary Review * [ A] welcome new editionMiller and Mitchells major achievement lies in their framing of Dickinson herself to reflect how attitudes about her and even about what constitutes a Dickinson letter have changed since the mid-twentieth centuryAlthough Dickinson sent hundreds of gifts, each accompanied by a letter, for her the letter itself (given or received) was the true gift, a belief that this new edition amply confirms. -- Meg Schoerke * Hudson Review * A major literary achievementwe are lucky to have [ this] meticulously edited new collection. -- Christopher Benfey * New York Review of Books * An illuminating contextualization of many poems originally sent as correspondence. What we might previously have read as freestanding poems we now see as part of a flow of conversationevery letter is potentially of interest and importance[ this] new edition of Dickinsons letters grants us, as well, an expanded view of a great poet, admitting us as never before to the kingdom of possibility that was her mind. -- Sally Thomas * National Review * What is there to be said of the new, expanded edition of the Letters of the great nineteenth-century American poet Emily Dickinson? Only this. That it is one of the most delightful gatherings of a lifetimes correspondence that anyone could ever wish to read: odd, spirited, soul-warming, hilarious, philosophical. No other poet has looked at the world quite so breathlessly side-on as Emily did. -- Michael Glover * The Tablet * This new [ volume],the first that aspires to completeness in more than sixty years, adds to Johnson and Ward the eighty letters discovered and published since 1958, presents the correspondence newly transcribed, redated and annotated, and in perhaps its most significant editorial decision adds to this epistolary haul 200 poems that, because they carry an address or signature, or both, are counted as letters. There could be no better undertakers of this complex and much-needed task than Cristanne Miller and Domhnall Mitchell. -- Fiona Green * Times Literary Supplement * For those who know [ Dickinsons]work, this impressive collection will enhance your enjoyment, deeply. For those relatively new to her, this is an excellent place to start. I cannot fault this triumph of a booktruly a delight. -- Niamh McNally * Fortnight * The edition is everything we need[ it] rescues the letters from the stacks of the university library and thus from the sense that they are only to be referred to, rather than read[ Miller and Mitchell] took on the responsibility of compiling the letters of a Dickinson so much more public, more networked and more political than Johnson and Wards, and that meant reckoning with her poetry not just as writing by but also as writing to[ they] have enabled that gainful endeavor with style, rigour, and a willing embrace of difficulty. -- Jamie Fenton * Review of English Studies * Collating all 1,049 letters in the 1958 edition, together with at least eight newly discovered or radically re-edited letters, this ambitious volume also includes over two hundred letter-poemsThe editors have taken a forensic approach, redating hundreds of letters by painstakingly cross-referencing meteorological and horticultural records from Amherst, databases such as Americas Historical Newspapers, and diaries belonging to Dickinsons two siblings. This holistic redating, together with their meticulous annotations, affords the reader a new appreciation of the ways in which Dickinson registers and responds to community and world events. -- Eleanor Spencer-Regan * Australian Book Review * Cristanne Miller and Domhnall Mitchell present the poet in remarkable new lightthis edition is exceptional overall and will prompt readers to explore the contours of Dickinsons movements from prose to poetry and back again and meet anew the extraordinary life of her words. -- Judith Scholes * Prose Studies * The first complete collection of Dickinsons correspondence made available since the 1950s[ the editors] annotations make Dickinsons letters accessible to general readers, including those who might be relatively unfamiliar with the details of Dickinsons life. The collection will also, of course, be of tremendous value to future biographers and literary scholars. -- Hannah Joyner * Open Letters Review * Emily Dickinsons poems can be read as letters to the world and immortality and her letters as poetic utterances from an exquisite mind. Her letters offer a considerable resource in any effort to interpretate and situate her poetry, often embedded, or set within letters as well as most often a letter in itself. They are a joy to read in themselves and have an extraordinary range of registers and are full of literary allusionsThe editors have produced a wonderfully accessible book with considerable cross-referencing of letters and poems, correspondents' biographies, including less well known townspeople, a useful introduction, Emily's miscellaneous writings, recipes, and a selected bibliography to add to our understanding of this exceptional woman. -- David Caddy * Tears in the Fence * This extraordinary collection shows [ Dickinson] to be a masterful prose writerAn exciting new standard in Dickinson scholarship. * Kirkus Reviews * This brilliantly expansive and comprehensive collection of Emily Dickinsons letters shows us just how deeply she was embedded in her social world. Here we see, in Dickinsons own words, a writer exchanging ideas with a wide circle of friends and family members, honing her abilities as a poet, and grappling with a nation torn by war over slavery and race. In these letters, we see the life of a genius unfold. -- Jericho Brown, winner of the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry Drawing deeply on more than three decades of editorial scholarship, Miller and Mitchell give us a Dickinson both inseparable from her own time and indispensable to ours. Meticulously edited from archival sources and annotated with immense care, this work overwhelmingly shows that both Dickinsons poems and her letters issue from a singular impetus: to seek in languageoften formally experimental, always compellingnew ways to express the strangeness and beauty of our experiences as finite beings in the world. -- Marta Werner, author of Writing in Time: Emily Dickinsons Master Hours A thrilling read that wholly immerses us in Dickinsons world. It seems Dickinson thought in poetry, as the characteristic cadence of her poems recurs in the letters themselves. Especially fascinating is the continuity of her long flirtatious argument with God, taken up in correspondence with her school friends, with eminent public figures, and in the poems she enclosed. Miller and Mitchell present a masterfully curated abundance. To read it is to encounter a mind on fire. -- Rae Armantrout, winner of the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry The Letters of Emily Dickinson provides a vital window into not only the poets inner life and art, but also her surprisingly wide social world. Miller and Mitchell, two of our foremost Dickinson scholars, have produced a fresh, definitive edition for the twenty-first century, tracking the relationship of poems to letters and precisely locating these treasures in their time and place. -- Bonnie Costello, coeditor of The Selected Letters of Marianne Moore

Cristanne Miller is SUNY Distinguished Professor and Edward H. Butler Professor of English at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York. Her many books include Emily Dickinson: A Poets Grammar, Reading in Time: Emily Dickinson in the Nineteenth Century, and Emily Dickinsons Poems: As She Preserved Them. Domhnall Mitchell is Professor of Nineteenth-Century American Literature at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. He is the author of Measures of Possibility: Emily Dickinsons Manuscripts and Emily Dickinson: Monarch of Perception.