Palace-Burner

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A01=Sarah Piatt
adultery
Author_Sarah Piatt
Category=DCF
children
deviant poetics
dialogue
dramatic realism
Emily Dickinson
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
experiemental
genteel
Harper's Bazaar
Harper's Weekly
Irland
ironic
irony
language
marriage
motherhood
polyvocal
Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt
stylist
Victorian
woman

Product details

  • ISBN 9780252072819
  • Weight: 399g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Sep 2005
  • Publisher: University of Illinois Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The unique and powerful voice of an extraordinary nineteenth-century woman poet

Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt (1836-1919) now ranks as the strongest American woman poet of the nineteenth century after Emily Dickinson. Published heavily in all the period's most prestigious journals, Piatt was widely celebrated by her peers as a gifted stylist in the genteel tradition. This selected edition reveals Piatt's other side, a side that contemporary critics found more problematic: ironic, experimental, pushing the limits of Victorian language and the sentimental female persona.

Spanning more than half a century, this collection reveals the "borderland temper" of Piatt's mind and art. As an expatriate southerner, Piatt voices guilt at her own past as the daughter of slave-holders and raw anguish at the waste of war; as an eleven-year "exile" in Ireland, she expresses her dismay at the indifference of the wealthy to the daily suffering of the poor. Her poetry, whether speaking of children, motherhood, marriage, or illicit love affairs, uses conventional language and forms but in ways that greatly broadened the range of what women's poetry could say. Going beyond and even contradicting the genteel aesthetic, Piatt's poetry moves toward an innovative kind of dramatic realism built on dialogue, an approach more familiar to modern readers, acquainted with Faulknerian polyvocal texts, than to her contemporaries, who were as ill at ease with complexity as they were with irony. 

This astutely edited selection of Piatt's mature work--much of it never before collected--explains why her "deviant poetics" caused her peers such discomfort and why they offer such fertile ground for study today. Illustrated with engravings from Harper's Weekly and Harper's Bazaar, both periodicals in which Piatt's work appeared, Palace-Burner marks the reemergence of one of the most interesting writers in American literary history.

Paula Bernat Bennett, a professor of English at Southern Illinois University, is the author of My Life a Loaded Gun: Female Creativity and Feminist Poetics and other books and the editor of Nineteenth-Century American Woman Poets: An Anthology.

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