Poetry and the feminine from Behn to Cowper

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227 pages 2005

About This Book

"Poetry and the Feminine revisits the foundations of poetic representation and value for women and men poets of the Restoration and eighteenth century, including Aphra Behn, John Dryden, Anne Killigrew, Anne Finch, Alexander Pope, James Thomson, Thomas Gray, Ann Yearsley, and Anna Seward. Keith argues that fundamental to poetic innovation in this era are poets' revisions of "feminine" figures such as the muse and Nature. Feminine Nature serves these poets as an infinitely expandable category of form that allows them to redefine poetry and poetic subjectivity. These poetic innovations include exploring the very grounds of mimesis, dismantling the hierarchy of poetic kinds, and using sensibility to yoke aesthetic and ethical values. In an inclusive framework, Keith presents a history of poetic change through women's and men's complex dialogues with poetic contexts and conventions."--Jacket.

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