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About The Book

This book attempts to restore the power of the figure of the “spinster” as conceptualized by feminist critic Mary Daly by presenting Emily Dickinson and Marianne Moore as exemplars of subversive spinsterhood. Using criticism that examines Dickinson’s fascicles and feminist criticism that reassesses gender in Moore I will suggest the presence of a “spinster poetics” in Dickinson’s and Moore’s writing. By “spinster poetics” I mean a repetition of themes that captures the experience of the spinster which includes complicated responses to patriarchy meditations on intimacy and isolation and identification as “other” or non-normative. I will argue that these themes coupled with evidence from Dickinson’s and Moore’s correspondence evince the poets’ respective decisions to “define her Self by choice neither in relation to children nor to men” in fulfillment of Daly’s definition. I aim to rehabilitate spinsterhood as a valuable state one that possesses great potential for creative production rather than read it as closeting repressive pose for homosexuals.
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