About this book
Elizabeth Bishop represents a full-scale examination of Bishop's workâpoetry, prose, and selected unpublished materialâto reveal how personal loss becomes implicated in her vision of self as fluid and unfixed and, at the same time, how gender and sexual identity inform the experience of loss in the act of writing. Susan McCabe argues that Bishop counters modernist claims for an autonomous art object and an impersonal artist; Bishop's writing never represents an escape into perfected forms, but instead calls attention to the processes of language that construct identity. McCabe emphasizes how personal experience is deeply enmeshed with Bishop's poetics. Bishop's project returns to her early lossesâthe death of her father and her mother's madnessâand uses them to disclose the instability of the concepts of self or place through a rhetoric of indeterminacy and uncertainty. Although Bishop has recently begun to receive the critical attention she deserves, this book uniquely brings loss to the foreground in connection with identity, gender, and the fashioning of a feminist poetics.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Writing Loss
- 2 Artifices of Independence
- 3 A Conspiring Root of Desire: The Search for Love
- 4 Imagined Places and the Questions of History
- 5 Remembering the Homemade
- Conclusion: âThat Peculiar Affirmativeâ
- Notes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
