Emily Dickinson and Her Contemporaries: Women's Verse in America, 1820-85

by Elizabeth A. Petrino

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Elizabeth A. Petrino places the Belle of Amherst within the context of other nineteenth-century women poets and examines the feminist implications of their work. Dickinson and contemporaries like Lydia Sigourney, Louisa May Alcott, and Helen Hunt Jackson developed in their writing a rhetoric of duplicity that enabled them to question conventional values but still maintain the propriety necessary to achieve publication. To demonstrate these strategies, Petrino examines both Dickinson's poetry and a range of "women's" genres, from the child elegy to the discourse of flowers. She also enlists contemporary magazines, unpublished professional correspondence, even gravestone inscriptions and posthumous paintings of children to explain what Petrino calls the most significant fact of Dickinson's literary biography, her decision not to publish.
  • ISBN10 0874518385
  • ISBN13 9780874518382
  • Publish Date 31 May 1998
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 14 March 2010
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint University Press of New England
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 256
  • Language English