Networked Recluse

Regular price €36.50
A Poet's Grammar
A Poet’s Grammar
A01=Marta L. Werner
A01=Susan Howe
American poet
American poetry
Amherst
As She Preserved Them
Author_Marta L. Werner
Author_Susan Howe
Category=DC
Category=DNBL
digital archives
Emily Dickinson Archive
Emily Dickinson Museum
Emily Dickinson's Home
Emily Dickinson’s Home
envelope poems
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
George Steiner
hope is the thing with feathers
influential women
Jen Bervin
Letters of Emily Dickinson
life of a poet
life of a writer
literary archives
literary history
literary remains
literary women
Lohf Fund for Poetry
MA
Mabel Loomis Todd
Massachusetts history
Morgan Library
My Emily Dickinson
New England history
Open Me Carefully
poetic life
Ralph W. Franklin
Reverand Charles Wadsworth
Susan Howe
These Fevered Days
Thomas H. Johnson
Thomas Wentworth Higginson

Product details

  • ISBN 9781943208067
  • Dimensions: 279 x 279mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Jan 2017
  • Publisher: Michigan Publishing Services
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The image is so well known it is practically iconic: The reclusive poet, feminine and fragile, weaving verse of beguiling complexity from the room in which she kept herself sequestered from the world. The Belle of Amherst, the distinctive American voice, the singer of the soul’s mysteries: Emily Dickinson.

Yet that image scarcely captures the fullness and vitality of Dickinson’s life, most notably her many connections—to family, to friends, to correspondents, to the literary tastemakers of her day, even to the unnamed, and perhaps unknowable, “Master” to whom she addressed three of her most breathtaking works of prose. Through an exploration of a relatively small group of items from Dickinson’s vast literary remains, this volume—an accompaniment to an exhibition on Dickinson mounted at The Morgan Library & Museum in New York—demonstrates the complex ways in which these often humble objects came into conversation with other people, places, and events in the poet’s life. Seeing the network of connections and influences that shaped Dickinson’s life presents us with a different understanding of this most enigmatic yet elegiac poet in American letters, and allows us more fully to appreciate both her uniqueness and her humanity.

The materials collected here make clear that the story of Dickinson’s manuscripts, her life, and her work is still unfolding. While the image of Dickinson as the reclusive poet dressed only in white remains a popular myth, details of Dickinson’s life continue to emerge. Several items included both in the exhibit and in this volume were not known to exist until the present century. The scrap of biographical intelligence recorded by Sarah Tuthill in a Mount Holyoke catalogue, or the concern about Dickinson’s salvation expressed by Abby Wood in a private letter to Abiah Root, were acquired by Amherst College in the last fifteen years. What additional pieces of evidence remain to be uncovered and identified in the attics and basements of New England?

Published to accompany The Morgan Library & Museum’s pathbreaking exhibit I’m Nobody! Who are You? The Life and Poetry of Emily Dickinson—part of a series of exhibits at the Morgan celebrating and exploring the creative lives of significant women authors—The Networked Recluse offers the reader an account of the exhibit itself, together with a series of contributions by curators, scholars of Dickinson, and poets whose own work her words have influenced.

Mike Kelly is head of Archives and Special Collections at the Robert Frost Library of Amherst College.

Carolyn Vega is Assistant Curator of Literary and Historical Manuscripts at The Morgan Library & Museum, New York.

Marta Werneris professor of English in the department of Liberal Arts, D’Youville College, Buffalo, New York, and co-author of The Gorgeous Nothings.

Susan Howe, a painter, poet, and author, received the American Book Award for My Emily Dickinson. In 2011 she was also awarded the Bollingen Prize for Poetry.

Richard Wilbur is John Woodruff Simpson Lecturer at Amherst College, former Poet Laureate of the United States, and two-time Pulitzer Prize honoree.