Was Emily Dickinson a radical poet of the avant-garde, challenging
the regularized notions of predominantly male poets and editors
regarding stanza shape, typographical publication and distribution,
spelling and punctuation, visual and verbal presentation, erotic love,
and so on? Or was she a poet of restraint, who restricted herself to a
few traditional patterns of meter and stanza, referred to the wayward
Whitman as “disgraceful,” and wore her prim white dress as a sign of
those renunciations best expressed in that wildest word “No”?
It is a conflict reaching back to what has come to be called “The War Between the Houses” ... Christopher Benfey, nybooks.
It is a conflict reaching back to what has come to be called “The War Between the Houses” ... Christopher Benfey, nybooks.
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