Emily Dickinson

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Standard Name: Dickinson, Emily
Birth Name: Emily Elizabeth Dickinson
Emily Dickinson is primarily known for her poems; she was also a letter writer. She published very little during her lifetime and the full scope of her output—some 1,775 poems—was discovered only after her death.
Wolff, Cynthia Griffin. Emily Dickinson. Knopf.
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ED 's verse thoroughly engages with the issue of identity, how best to be.
Wolff, Cynthia Griffin. Emily Dickinson. Knopf.
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She is held to be among the best and most original of nineteenth-century US poets.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Travel Rumer Godden
RG visited the USA so frequently that she felt it was her territory, even before undertaking a coast-to-coast lecture tour.
Godden, Rumer. A House with Four Rooms. Macmillan.
221
On another occasion, making a pilgrimage to Emily Dickinson 's house at Amherst, Massachusetts...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Rosamund Marriott Watson
RMW 's total reviews eventually numbered over one hundred and fifty. In her first year she considered children's books (including a title by Beatrix Potter ), books on design, and second-rate novels. Her efforts were...
Textual Production Edith Sitwell
ES loved Christina Rossetti from her childhood, and later thoroughly admired Gertrude Stein . As a young woman, however, she believed: Women's poetry, with the exception of Sappho . . . and Goblin MarketChristina Rossetti and...
Textual Production Emily Brontë
The linkage of most of EB 's poetry with the (unattainable) narratives of the juvenilia, and the difficulty of ordering its manuscript materials, means that it poses a complex problem of editing and interpretation, lesser...
Textual Production Elaine Feinstein
EF says her fiction and poetry come from different parts of herself: the voice, the cadences, the rhythms are very different. She sees fiction as involving impersonation of other people.
Pacernick, Gary. Meaning and Memory: Interviews with Fourteen Jewish Poets. Ohio State University Press.
180
For the craft of...
Textual Production Emma Tennant
ET published Wild Nights, a fictional childhood memoir, titled from the opening words of a poem by Emily Dickinson .
“Emma Tennant”. Fantastic Fiction.
Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford.
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
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Textual Production A. S. Byatt
She thought of the title and the central idea for the novel in the British Library, watching that great Coleridge scholar, Kathleen Coburn , and thinking of the poet possessing his critic, and of the...
Textual Production Rumer Godden
Bodley Head issued RG 's A Letter to the World: poems for young readers: a selection from the work of Emily Dickinson (a poet she had discovered with, she said, instant recognition).
The...
Textual Production Anne Carson
AC 's poetry collection Men in the Off Hours, 2000, variously inhabits the minds (and bodies) of Tolstoy , Lazarus, Freud , Catullus , Sappho and Emily Dickinson , not to mention the French...
Textual Production Sarah Daniels
When Sally Avens conceived of a series of four radio plays, Women on Love, based on love-poems by women, SD contributed a piece on Carol Ann Duffy 's Warming Her Pearls (in which a...
Textual Production Adrienne Rich
In this book AR continues to reconstruct a feminist literary tradition through such essays as Vesuvius at Home: The Poetry of Emily Dickinson, The Tensions of Anne Bradstreet, Woman Observing, Preserving, Conspiring, Surviving...
Textual Production Carol Ann Duffy
CAD has edited two poetry anthologies aimed at teenagers: I Wouldn't Thank You for a Valentine (1992, with illustrations by Trisha Rafferty ), and Stopping for Death (a title which alludes to Emily Dickinson )...
Textual Features Edith Sitwell
The English edition appeared the following year. Her choice for inclusion is, as usual, idiosyncratic. She begins well before Chaucer , with anonymous early religious poems in which may be heard, she writes, the creaking...
Textual Features Anne Stevenson
Despite the strong emotion expressed in some of these poems, AS later remembered the volume as setting free her gift for irony.
Stevenson, Anne. Between the Iceberg and the Ship. University of Michigan Press.
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The final poem, A Legacy, On my Fiftieth Birthday, is written...
Textual Features Monica Furlong
The different spiritual traditions represented here include ancient Greeks, medieval Christians, Buddhists, Jews, Australian Aboriginals and Native Americans. The authors of prayers include Teresa of Avila , Emily Dickinson , Denise Levertov , Oodgeroo Noonuccal , and Alice Walker .
Blackwell’s Online Bookshop. http://Bookshop.Blackwell.co.uk.

Timeline

August 1973: The National Women's Hall of Fame was inaugurated...

Building item

August 1973

The National Women's Hall of Fame was inaugurated at Seneca Falls, New York, USA, site of the women's rights convention of 19 July 1848.

Texts

Dickinson, Emily et al. A Letter to the World. Bodley Head, 1968.
Dickinson, Emily. “Biographical Note”. Final Harvest: Emily Dickinson’s Poems, edited by Thomas Johnson, Little, Brown, 1961, p. v - vi.
Dickinson, Emily. “Editorial Materials”. Open Me Carefully. Emily Dickinson’s Intimate Letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson, edited by Ellen Louise Hart and Martha Nell Smith, Paris Press, 1998, p. various pages.
Dickinson, Emily. Further Poems of Emily Dickinson withheld from publication by her sister Lavinia. Editors Bianchi, Martha Dickinson and Alfred Leete Hampson, Little, Brown, and Co., 1929.
Dickinson, Emily. Poems by Emily Dickinson. Editors Todd, Mabel Loomis and Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Roberts Brothers, 1890.
Dickinson, Emily, and Martha Dickinson Bianchi. The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson. Little, Brown, 1924.
Dickinson, Emily. The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson. Editor Johnson, Thomas, Faber and Faber, 1970.
Dickinson, Emily. The Letters of Emily Dickinson. Editor Johnson, Thomas, Harvard University Press, 1958.
Bianchi, Martha Dickinson, and Emily Dickinson. The Life and Letters of Emily Dickinson. Houghton Mifflin, 1924.
Bianchi, Martha Dickinson, and Emily Dickinson. The Life and Letters of Emily Dickinson. Biblo and Tannen, 1971.
Dickinson, Emily. The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson. Editor Franklin, Ralph W., Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1981.
Dickinson, Emily. The Poems of Emily Dickinson. Editor Johnson, Thomas, Belknap Press, 1955.