The Poetry of Louise Gluck
Daniel Morris
ISBN: | 9780826216939 |
Publisher: | University of Missouri Press |
Published: | 15 December, 2006 |
Format: | Hardback |
Language: | English |
Links | Australian Libraries (Trove) |
The Poetry of Louise Gluck
Daniel Morris
A dominant figure in American poetry for more than thirty-five years, Louise Gluck has been the recipient of virtually every major poetry award and was named U.S. poet laureate for 2003 2004. In a new full-length study of her work, Daniel Morris explores how this prolific poet utilizes masks of characters from history, the Bible, and even fairy tales. Morris treats Gluck s persistent themes desire, hunger, trauma, survival through close reading of her major book-length sequences from the 1990s: "Ararat, Meadowlands, "and "The Wild Iris." An additional chapter devoted to "The House on Marshland" (1975) shows how its revision of Romanticism and nature poetry anticipated these later works. Seeing Gluck s poems as complex analyses of the authorial self via sustained central metaphors, Morris reads her poetry against a narrative pattern that shifts from the tones of anger, despair, and resentment found in her early "Firstborn" to the resignation of "Ararat" and proceeds in her latest volumes, including" Vita Nova "and "Averno," toward an ambivalent embrace of embodied life.By showing how Gluck s poems may be read as a form of commentary on the meanings of great literature and myth, Morris emphasizes her irreverent attitude toward the canons through which she both expresses herself and deflects her autobiographical impulse. By discussing her sense of self, of Judaism, and of the poetic tradition, he explores her position as a mystic poet with an ambivalent relationship to religious
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