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Confessional Poets
Terms | Life | Times | Class Discussion | Group Questions | Links | Pictures | Quotes from Critics Terms to KnowConfessional Poetry: Confessional poetry is verse in which the author describes parts of his or her life that would not ordinarily be in the public domain. The prime characteristic is the reduction of distance between the persona displayed in a poem and the author who writes it. This genre of verse derives from the romantics, who put a high premium on the exploration of personal feeling. Poems such as Nutting by William Wordsworth, Dejection by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Ode to the West Wind—“I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed”—by Percy Bysshe Shelley would seem to be precursors. More immediately, confessional poetry relates to The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T. S. Eliot and also Hugh Selwyn Mauberley and The Pisan Cantos by Ezra Pound, where intimate references to friends are worked into the verse: It would be an astute reader who could identify the figures to whom this refers as, respectively, Ford Madox Ford, W. B. Yeats, and James Joyce. Remainder of essay (which includes commentary on Plath and Sexton) is accessible here. Hobsbaum, Philip. "Confessional Poetry." The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Literature. Ed. Jay Parini. Oxford University Press 2004. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. Ocean County College Library. 3 May 2009. Psychoanalysis: Therapy for treating behaviour disorders, particularly neurosis, based on the work of Sigmund Freud. Psychoanalysis emphasises unconscious mental processes and the determination of personality by instinct, chiefly sexual development in childhood. Psychoanalytic techniques include free association and the analysis and interpretation of dreams. The patient expresses repressed conflicts through transference to the analyst. "psychoanalysis." World Encyclopedia. 2008. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. Ocean County College Library. 3 May 2009. villanelle: A poem composed of an uneven number (usually five) of tercets rhyming aba, with a final quatrain rhyming abaa. In this French fixed form , the first and third lines of the opening tercet are repeated alternately as the third lines of the succeeding tercets, and together as the final couplet of the quatrain. Representing these repeated lines in capitals, with the second of them given in italic, the rhyme scheme may be displayed thus: AbA abA abA abA abA abAA. The form was established in France in the 16th century, and used chiefly for pastoral songs. In English, it was used for light vers de société by some minor poets of the late 19th century; but it has been adopted for more serious use by W. H. Auden , William Empson , and Derek Mahon . The best-known villanelle in English, however, is Dylan Thomas's ‘Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night’ ( 1951 ) "villanelle" The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms. Chris Baldick. Oxford University Press, 2008. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. Ocean County College. 5 May 2009. The Life See the textbook introductions for brief biographies and the links below for longer biographies. Elizabeth Bishop. Ashley Brown. American Poets Since World War II . Ed. Donald J. Greiner. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 5 . Detroit: Gale Research, 1980. From Literature Resource Center. Anne Sexton. Diane Wood Middlebrook. American Poets Since World War II: Fifth Series. Ed. Joseph Mark Conte. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 169 . Detroit: Gale Research, 1996. From Literature Resource Center. Sylvia Plath. Thomas McClanahan. American Poets Since World War II. Ed. Donald J. Greiner. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 5 . Detroit: Gale Research, 1980. From Literature Resource Center . The Times Given the interest in reality TV and talk shows, not sure if we've moved from the voyeurism inherent in confessional poetry. The biographies of each of the authors above mention Robert Lowell, whose works are included in our textbook. Functioning as a kind of 60s era Ezra Pound, he furthered the careers of many poets (close friends with Bishop -- and taught Sexton and Plath), and wrote many fine poems, yet his own work is often overshadowed by those in his circle. Class Discussion “The Fish”
“One Art”
“In the Waiting Room”
“The Moose”
Anne Sexton “The Truth the Dead Know”
“The Starry Night”
“Sylvia's Death” Sylvia Plath “Lady Lazarus”
enjambment: The running over of the sense and grammatical structure from one verse line or couplet to the next without a punctuated pause. In an enjambed line (also called a ‘run-on line'), the completion of a phrase, clause, or sentence is held over to the following line so that the line ending is not emphasized as it is in an end-stopped line. Enjambment is one of the resources available to poets in English blank verse , but it appears in other verse forms too, even in heroic couplets : Keats rejected the 18th-century closed couplet by using frequent enjambment in Endymion ( 1818 ), of which the first and fifth lines are end-stopped while the lines in between are enjambed.
"enjambment." The Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms. Chris Baldick. Oxford University Press, 2008. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. Ocean County College Library. 5 May 2009 .
“Ariel” “Daddy”
Group Questions
Pictures, Pictures, Pictures The Starry Night by Vincent Van Gogh Quotes from Critics © David Bordelon 2009
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