Synopses & Reviews
This work relates nonlinear narrative in H. D.'s late long poems in three new historical contexts: Melanie Klein's pioneering psychoanalysis of children (Trilogy), the revolutionary film aesthetic of Sergei Eisenstein (Helen in Egypt), and African decolonization (Hermetic Definition). Drawing on archival materials, biography, war journalism and theoretical source texts, the author argues that the visionary politics of H. D.'s long poems cannot be reconciled with the feminist agendas currently attributed to them. Out of line with radical and reactionary agendas alike, H. D.'s poems problematize, even as they solicit, feminists' attempts to invest women's literature with the powers of prophecy and social redemption.
Synopsis
An analysis of the poetry of H. D. and feminist issues.
Synopsis
A Stanford University Press classic.
Synopsis
Drawing on archival materials, biography, war journalism, and theoretical texts, the author argues that the visionary politics of H.D.'s long poems cannot be reconciled with the feminist agendas currently attributed to them.
Synopsis
“This book is extraordinary on many counts: in the originality and authority of its argument, in its scholarship and breadth of reference, and in its uncongested and nuanced style. In an intelligent and reflective way, the author takes account of a wide range of contemporary critical debates: feminism, modern poetics, psychoanalysis, cinematography, gay and lesbian studies, and questions of race, marginality, colonialism, and imperialism. She gives sophisticated, original, and persuasive readings of the poems, readings that have energy, verve, and playfulness as well.”—Eileen Gregory, University of Dallas