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Medeas Chorus: Myth and Womens Poetry Since 1950 New edition [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 164 pages, height x width: 230x155 mm, weight: 390 g
  • Sērija : Studies in Modern Poetry 19
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Apr-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 143312064X
  • ISBN-13: 9781433120640
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  • Cena: 90,02 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 164 pages, height x width: 230x155 mm, weight: 390 g
  • Sērija : Studies in Modern Poetry 19
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Apr-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 143312064X
  • ISBN-13: 9781433120640
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Medea’s Chorus tracks mythic revision from the 1950s through the second-wave feminist movement and into turn-of-the-century feminism to highlight individual achievements and to show the collective effect of the poets’ highly varied works on post-WWII literature and feminist thought and practice.

Women’s mythic revision is a tradition at the heart of twentieth-century literature. Medea’s Chorus explores post-WWII women’s poetry that takes Greek mythology as its central topos. The book investigates five of the most influential poets writing in the twentieth century (H.D., Sylvia Plath, Adrienne Rich, Margaret Atwood, Eavan Boland) who challenge both the ancient literary representations of women and the high modernist appropriations of the classics. In their poetry and prose, the women engage with cultural discourses about literary authority, gender, oppression, violence, and age. Yet even while the poets rework certain aspects of the Greek myths that they find troubling, they see the inherent power in the stories and use that power for personal and social revelation. Because myths exist in multiple versions, ancient writers did not create from scratch; their artistic contribution lay in how they changed the stories. Modern female poets are engaging in a several millennia-old tradition of mythic revision, a tradition that has ruthlessly posited that there is no place for women in the creation and transmission of mythological poetry. Medea’s Chorus tracks mythic revision from the 1950s through the second-wave feminist movement and into turn-of-the-century feminism to highlight individual achievements and to show the collective effect of the poets’ highly varied works on post-WWII literature and feminist thought and practice. This engaging and beautifully written book is a must-read for any student, teacher, or scholar of the Classical Tradition, revisionist mythmaking, and twentieth-century poetry.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: "Backward to your sources, sacred rivers!" xv
The High Modernist Homeric Return xvii
Women Writers' Call to Re-Action xx
Chapter One H.D.'s Revision of Kleos Culture in Helen in Egypt
1(26)
H.D.'s Mythic Mirror
1(4)
Helen's Multiple Personalities
5(6)
"There is a voice within me": Helen's Reconciled Identity
11(6)
"A challenge...to all song forever": A Different Kind of Glory
17(10)
Chapter Two Sylvia Plath's Complex Electra
27(24)
The Myth of Real Life
27(6)
Electra's and Clytemnestra's Ancient Pasts
33(3)
"Father, bridegroom": Plath's Tragic Identification
36(7)
"Too nice for murder": Plath's Tragic Failure
43(8)
Chapter Three The Mysteries of Adrienne Rich's Radical Feminism in Dream of a Common Language
51(26)
The Book of Myths
51(8)
Homeric Hymn to Demeter and the Eleusinian Mysteries
59(4)
"Old songs with new words": Adrienne Rich's Eleusis
63(11)
"Cutting-away of an old force": Rich's Rejection of Classical Mythology
74(3)
Chapter Four Margaret Atwood's Transformed Circe
77(28)
Living on the Margins
77(4)
The Origins of the Stereotypes
81(7)
"Escaped from these mythologies?": Heroic Transformations
88(14)
The True Story in the Book of Myths: Atwood's Dive into Rich's Wreck
102(3)
Chapter Five Eavan Boland's Aging Earth Mother
105(16)
Theories of Myth and Aging
105(2)
"What great art removes": Ephemeral and Fixed Bodies
107(1)
"Words I can grow old and die in": An Irish Ceres
108(10)
"Take something and break it": No More Mythologies
118(3)
Conclusion: Feminist Mythmaking at the Crossroads
121(8)
"That Stranger Was Myself!": Identification With The Other
123(6)
Notes 129(12)
Bibliography 141(10)
Index 151
Veronica House is Associate Faculty Director for Service-Learning and Outreach in the Program for Writing and Rhetoric at the University of Colorado Boulder, where she has taught courses in mythology, womens literature, and the Classical Tradition. She holds a PhD in English from the University of Texas at Austin and an MFA in Creative Writing, Poetry, from the University of Maryland.