A Sociopolitical Ecofeminist Reading of Selected Animal Poems by Elizabeth Bishop
Abstract
This article examines the sociopolitical vision of some of Elizabeth Bishop’s poems from an ecofeminist critical perspective. Bishop, a twentieth-century American poet, uses animals and natural elements to manifest her attachment to nature (and women by implication), thus reflecting an oppressed feminist voice through the theme of abused, weak nature. By relating Bishop’s poems to W. B. Yeats’s poem Leda and the Swan, we foreground an ecofeminist relation between the Greek myth Yeats employed and Bishop’s poems. Our contribution lies in the multilayered pattern of ecofeminist defense this article traces in poems like Giant Snail, Giant Toad, Strayed Crab, The Armadillo, Sandpiper, The Moose and Trouvée. The conclusion emphasizes the attempts Bishop shoulders through her animal poetry to renew the old man-nature relation of balance and justice and simultaneously to elevate woman/nature. Bishop's poetry, it is argued, exceeds the personal or subjective and thus contains socio-political, anti-patriarchal thrusts explored in this article through an ecofeminist lens.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Ausubel, J. (1994). Subjected people: towards a grammar for the underclass in Elizabeth Bishop’s poetry. Connotations, 4(1:2), 83-97. http://www.connotations.de/article/jonathan-ausubel-subjected-people-towards-a-grammar-for-the-underclass-in-elizabeth-bishops-poetry/
Babaee, R & Yahya, W. (2014). Yeats’ “Leda and the Swan”: a myth of violence. International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences, 27, 170-176. https://www.scipress.com/ILSHS.27.170
Bishop, E. (1964). Unpublished correspondence with Anne Stevenson special collections. Unpublished Manuscript. Washington University: St. Louis, MO.
Bishop, E. (2004). Elizabeth Bishop – Poems-. PoemHunter.Com – The World’s Poetry Archive. Retrieved from http://calhoun.k12.il.us/teachers/wdeffenbaugh/collegepreplinks/Elizabeth%20Bishop%20Poetry%20Collection.pdf
Blasing, M. K. (1994). From gender to genre and back: Elizabeth Bishop and “The Moose”. American Literary History, 6(2), 265-286. https://doi.org/10.1093/alh/6.2.265
Buell, L, Heise, U & Thornber, K. (2011). Literature and environment. Annual Review of Environment and Resources, 36, 417-440. http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-environ-111109-144855
Campbell, S. (1996). The land and the language of desire: where deep ecology and post-structuralism meet. In: C. Glotfelty and H. Fromm (Ed.), The Ecocriticism Reader (pp.124-36). Athens, GA and London: University of Georgia Press. https://chrisschnick.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/the-language-of-desire.pdf
Chen, J. (2009). A distant inheritance: the poetry of Elizabeth Bishop and the American transcendentalism. Journal of Cambridge Studies, 4(4), 127-135. http://journal.acs-cam.org.uk/data/archive/2009/200904-article12.pdf
Cullingford, E. (1994). Pornography and canonicity: the case of Yeats’s ‘Leda and the Swan’. In: Law, Literature and Feminism. Durhan: Buke University Press, pp.165-188. Retrieved from http://www.ibiblio.org/sally/Leda.html
Ebberson, L. (2006). Elizabeth Bishop’s poetic voice: reconciling influences. Retrieved form http://www.valpo.edu/vpr/ebbersonessaybishop.html
Fortuny, K. (2015). Elizabeth Bishop’s ‘Pink Dog’ and other non-human animals. Textual Practice, 29(6), 1099-1116. https://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2015.1024721
Gaard, G & Murphy, PD. (1998). Introduction to ecofeminist literary criticism: theory, interpretation, pedagogy. Urbana: Univ. Illinois Press.
“Glossary Terms: Didactic Poetry”. n.d. Retrieved form
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/resources/learning/glossary-terms/detail/didactic-poetry
Hadot, P. (2006). The veil of Isis: an essay on the history of the idea of nature. Mass: Beknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Harrison, V. (1993). Elizabeth Bishop’s poetics of intimacy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Huang, I. (2010). Landscapes, animals and human beings: Elizabeth Bishop’s poetry and ecocentrism. Retrieved from http://benz.nchu.edu.tw/~intergrams/intergrams/102-111/102-111-huang.pdf
Keller, L and Miller, C. (l984). Emily Dickinson, Elizabeth Bishop, and the rewards of indirection. The New England Quarterly, 57, 533-553. http://www.jstor.org/stable/365061
Lalonde, L. (2011). “Elizabeth Bishop’s photographic poetics: the peripheral vision”. PhD Thesis, Professional Papers. Paper 369.
Macgowan, C. (2004). Twentieth-century American poetry. United States: Blackwell Publishing.
Mateiro, G. ( 2012 ). Elizabeth Bishop in Brazil and after: a poetic career transformed. North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inco., Publishers.
Mellor, M. (1996). The politics of women and nature: affinity, contingency or material relation? Journal of Political Ideologies, 1 (2), 147-164. https://doi.org/10.1080/13569319608420734
Neimneh, S & Muhaidat, F. (2010). The ecological thought of J. M. Coetzee: the case of Life and Times of Michael K. Studies in Literature and Language CSCanada, 4(1), 12-19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/n
Plant, J. (1980s). Women and nature. An extract taken from 'Green Line' magazine (Oxford). Not dated, but late 1980's. Reprinted in 'The Green Reader'. Retrieved from https://www.thegreenfuse.org/plant.htm
Rotella, G. (1991). Reading & writing nature: the poetry of Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, and Elizabeth Bishop. Boston: Northeastern UP.
Sheenam. (2014). Conceptualizing anthropocentrism, ecocriticism and Third World environmentalism in a literary paradigm. Research Scholar An International Refereed e-Journal of Literary Explorations (RSIRJLE), 2 (IV), 154-163. http://www.researchscholar.co.in/downloads/21-sheenam.pdf
Sumathy, U. (2009). Ecocriticism in Practice. New Delhi: Sarup Books.
Vendler, H. (1987). The poems of Elizabeth Bishop. Critical Inquiry 13(4), 825-838. DOI: 10.1086/448422
Viana, M. (2010). Violence and violation: the rape in Yeats’s “Leda and the Swan”. Londrina, UFMG 6, 52-62. http://www.uel.br/pos/letras/EL/vagao/EL6Art6.pdf
DOI: https://doi.org/10.7575/aiac.alls.v.9n.1p.141
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
2010-2023 (CC-BY) Australian International Academic Centre PTY.LTD.
Advances in Language and Literary Studies
You may require to add the 'aiac.org.au' domain to your e-mail 'safe list’ If you do not receive e-mail in your 'inbox'. Otherwise, you may check your 'Spam mail' or 'junk mail' folders.