The Grief of Influence follows Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes through alternating periods of collaboation and competition, showing how each poet forged a voice both through and against the other's, and offering a new assessment of the twentieth century's most important poetic partnership.
The Grief of Influence follows Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes through alternating periods of collaboation and competition, showing how each poet forged a voice both through and against the other's, and offering a new assessment of the twentieth century's most important poetic partnership.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Heather Clark is Professor of Literature at Marlboro College and teaches Irish Studies at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House. She is the author of The Ulster Renaissance: Poetry in Belfast 1962-1972 (OUP, 2006), which won the Donald Murphy Prize for Distinguished First Book and the Robert Rhodes Prize for Books on Literature from the American Conference for Irish Studies. She has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and Emory University's Manuscript, Archive, and Rare Book Library, and reviews Irish poetry regularly for the Harvard Review. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and daughter.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1: Affinities and Assimilations 2: Secret Anxieties 3: The Other Two 4: Colonial Contexts 5: The Early Dialogue 6: Disarming the Enemy 7: Tracking the Thought-Fox 8: Hughes's Plath 9: Crow and Counter-revision 10: The Old Factory Demolished: Wodwo to Moortown 11: Fixed Stars: Birthday Letters Bibliography
Introduction 1: Affinities and Assimilations 2: Secret Anxieties 3: The Other Two 4: Colonial Contexts 5: The Early Dialogue 6: Disarming the Enemy 7: Tracking the Thought-Fox 8: Hughes's Plath 9: Crow and Counter-revision 10: The Old Factory Demolished: Wodwo to Moortown 11: Fixed Stars: Birthday Letters Bibliography
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