메뉴 건너뛰기
.. 내서재 .. 알림
소속 기관/학교 인증
인증하면 논문, 학술자료 등을  무료로 열람할 수 있어요.
한국대학교, 누리자동차, 시립도서관 등 나의 기관을 확인해보세요
(국내 대학 90% 이상 구독 중)
로그인 회원가입 고객센터 ENG
주제분류

추천
검색

논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
대한영어영문학회 영어영문학연구 영어영문학연구 제40권 제4호
발행연도
2014.1
수록면
21 - 42 (22page)

이용수

표지
📌
연구주제
📖
연구배경
🔬
연구방법
🏆
연구결과
AI에게 요청하기
추천
검색

초록· 키워드

오류제보하기
Rich herself becomes a model survivor of many poets of second wave feminism. Her survival hinged on empathy: empathy with her own kind. For Rich, the exilic condition, which displaces, reconfigures, and fragments the self, is not only a trope, but also an asset; it gives one a perspective, a vantage point. And it makes for a certain fertile detachment and gives one new ways of seeing. Rich’s vision of intimacy can be understood as a way to combat epistemological alienation by gaining self-consciousness through a looking inward and outward that can assess one’s past, fears, and desires in relation to one’s private and public(social) longings. While exile is an actual condition, it can also be a metaphorical condition from which she develops an ethics of intimacy. Rich’s poetry collection Twenty-One Love Poems(1976) calls for cultivating an intimacy which breaks down barriers between private and public life. The subject of Twenty-One Love Poems is not the lesbian love shared by the lovers but the politics of their resistance in the patriarchal world. In repudiating a sequestered, safe private life disengaged from the world around her, Rich insists that achieving intimacy cannot happen behind the cloaks of racial, gendered, and economic privileges.

목차

등록된 정보가 없습니다.

참고문헌 (21)

참고문헌 신청

이 논문의 저자 정보

최근 본 자료

전체보기

댓글(0)

0