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Document Description
Title
Cold
War
confessions
:
autobiographic
poetry
in the
age
of
anxiety
Author
Beardsworth
,
Adam
,
1974-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2008.
English
Date
2008
Pagination
vi, 257 leaves
Subject
American
poetry--20th
century--History
and
criticism;
Autobiography
in
literature--Political
aspects;
Cold
War
in
literature;
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English
Discipline
English
Language
Eng
Temporal Coverage
20th Century
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
(leaves
247-257)
Abstract
This
dissertation
revisits
a
contentious
group
of
twentieth-century
American
"confessional"
poets
consisting
of
John
Berryman
,
Robert
Lowell
,
Anne
Sexton
,
Sylvia
Plath
,
Delmore
Schwartz
, and
Randall
Jarrell.
It
analyzes
their
poetry
in
relation
to its
Cold
War
political
context
and
argues
that the
subjective
style
of these
poets
was
symptomatic
of a
subversive
response
to
containment
culture.
Forgoing
the
impersonality
of
modernist
idiom
, these
writers
developed
a
poetics
of
personality
that has
often
been
dismissed
by
critics
as
maudlin
and
narcissistic.
This
dissertation
counters
this
prevailing
view.
It
argues
that at a
time
in
American
history
when
civil
liberties
were
routinely
threatened
by
state-sanctioned
initiatives
such
as the
House
Un-American
Activities
Committee
(HUAC)
, the
turn
to an
autobiographic
style
emerged
as a
covert
means
of
expressing
political
dissent.
For these
midcentury
poets
, an
exploration
of the
abject
self
was the
starting
point
for a
poetics
that
revealed
the
guilt
,
trauma
, and
anxiety
common
to
Cold
War
experience
and that
challenged
state
incursions
upon
individual
autonomy.
--
One
of the
central
arguments
of this
dissertation
is
that the
insidious
nature
of
Cold
War
containment
pervaded
all
facets
of
society.
Impositions
upon
individual
autonomy
made
by an
American
surveillance
state
eager
to
contain
the
domestic
communist
threat
made
it
difficult
for
citizens
to
express
political
dissent
publicly
without
reprisal.
This
study
positions
the
"confessional"
style
as a
subversive
poetics
that
expresses
the
impact
of
public
anxieties
on the
private
self.
The
first
section
argues
that
John
Berryman
and
Robert
Lowell
forged
a
poetics
grounded
in a
negative
epistemology
in
order
to
articulate
Holocaust
and
nuclear
anxiety.
The
second
section
explores
how
Anne
Sexton
and
Sylvia
Plath
used
confession
to
challenge
constructions
of
normalized
identity
advocated
by the
increasingly
influential
institutions
of
psychiatry
and
psychology.
The
third
section
analyzes
Delmore
Schwartz
and
Randall
Jarrell's
reactions
to what they
regarded
as
similarities
between
cultural
containment
and the
institutionalization
of
literary
studies
via
the
organically
"contained"
protocols
of
New
Criticism.
This
dissertation
redresses
a
critical
misreading
of
midcentury
autobiographic
poetry
by
demonstrating
how its
"confessional"
style
was a
voice
of
resistance
to the
repressive
anxieties
of
Cold
War
experience.
Type
Text
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a2700619
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(28.57
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Beardsworth_Adam.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
113337.cpd