Friday, January 24, 2020
The Implicit Intimacy of Dickinsons Dashes Essay -- Emily Dickinson a
The Implicit Intimacy of Dickinson's Dashes The dash in Emily DickinsonÃâââ¬â¢s poetry, initially edited away as a sign of incompletion, has since come to be seen as crucial to the impact of her poems. Critics have examined the dash from a myriad of angles, viewing it as a rhetorical notation for oral performance, a technique for recreating the rhythm of a telegraph, or a subtraction sign in an underlying mathematical system.1 However, attempting to define DickinsonÃâââ¬â¢s intentions with the dash is clearly speculative given her varied dash-usage; in fact, one scholar illustrated the fallibility of one dash-interpretation by applying it to one of DickinsonÃâââ¬â¢s handwritten cake recipes (Franklin 120). Instead, I begin with the assumption that Ãâââ¬Å"textÃââ⬠as an entity involving both the reading and writing of the material implies a readerÃâââ¬â¢s attempt to recreate the act of writing as well as the writerÃâââ¬â¢s attempt to guide the act of reading. I will focus on the former , given the difficulties surrounding the notion of authorial intention a.k.a. the Death of the Author. Using three familiar Dickinson poemsÃâââ¬âÃâââ¬Å"The BrainÃâââ¬âis wider than the Sky,Ãââ⬠Ãâââ¬Å"The Soul selects her own Society,Ãââ⬠and Ãâââ¬Å"This was a PoetÃâââ¬âIt is that,Ãââ⬠Ãâââ¬âI contend that readers can penetrate the double mystery of Emily DickinsonÃâââ¬â¢s reclusive life and lyrically dense poetry by enjoying a sense of intimacy not dependent upon the content of her poems. The source of this intimacy lies in her remarkable punctuation. DickinsonÃâââ¬â¢s unconventionally-positioned dashes form disjunctures and connections in the readerÃâââ¬â¢s understanding that create the impression of following Dickinson through the creative process towards intimacy with the poet herself. This implicit intimacy becomes clear ... ...ickinsonÃâââ¬â¢s highly personal notations. Ironically, what at first seems an idiosyncratic stylistic effect operates to create a deep sense of intimacy between the reader and the creative process of a highly reclusive individual. Far from distancing the reader, the dash actually provides a gateway between the act of reading and the poetÃâââ¬â¢s moment of creation, only possible if we view the text as a shifting co-creation of reader and poet. Works Cited: Edith Wylder, The Last Face: Emily Dickinson's Manuscripts (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1971). Jerusha Hall McCormack, Ãâââ¬Å"Domesticating Delphi: Emily Dickinson and the Electro-Magnetic Telegraph,Ãââ⬠American Quarterly 55.4 (2003) 569-601. Michael Theune, Ãâââ¬Å"Ãâââ¬â¢One and One are OneÃâââ¬â¢Ãââ⬠¦and Two: An Inquiry into DickinsonÃâââ¬â¢s Use of Mathematical Signs,Ãââ⬠The Emily Dickinson Journal 10.1 (2001) 99-116.
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