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A Journey with Two Maps: Becoming a Woman Poet

Paperback

Main Details

Title A Journey with Two Maps: Becoming a Woman Poet
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Eavan Boland
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback
Pages:256
Dimensions(mm): Height 230,Width 137
Category/GenrePoetry by individual poets
Literary studies - poetry and poets
ISBN/Barcode 9781857545418
ClassificationsDewey:821.914
Audience
General
Undergraduate

Publishing Details

Publisher Carcanet Press Ltd
Imprint Carcanet Press Ltd
Publication Date 27 April 2011
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Each section of this anthology centres on a century of women poets. The essays discover not only the poet but the woman in her time. There is also a wide selection of the poems themselves. Boland sets out to find how the woman's life indented her experience as a poet, making us read back into the canon differently. We find ourselves partially reconstructing the canon out of the woman poet's reconstruction of the poem. The destination of these arguments is the central adventure the book describes: the ways in which the earlier centuries led towards the reductive identity of "the poetess", and how, at the start of the 20th century, this chrysalis-like identity was finally discarded. The book maps Boland's own journey. "As a poet whose working life began without the benefit of this poetry, and whose later reading was enchanted and strengthened by it", she says, "I think I am able to see these poems with a strange double-vision: as the young woman poet I was, imbued with standards and precepts whose secret effects meant I did not read them or think about them or -most importantly - think with them; and as the older woman who knows that without these poems a crucial perspective on everything else we read or write in poetry is missing".

Author Biography

Born in Dublin in 1944, Eavan Boland studied in Ireland, London and New York. Her first book was published in 1967. She has taught at Trinity College, University College and Bowdoin College Dublin, and at the University of Iowa. She is currently Mabury Knapp Professor in the Humanities at Stanford University, California. A pioneering figure in Irish poetry, Boland's previous works include The Journey and other poems (1987), Night Feed (1994), The Lost Land (1998) and Code (2001). Her poems and essays have appeared in magazines such as The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Kenyon Review and American Poetry Review. She is a regular reviewer for the Irish Times. She divides her time between California and Dublin where she lives with her husband, the novelist Kevin Casey.

Reviews

Starred Review. Boland offers encouragement to women poets of the future. If some of her language is directed to those writing or reading poetry, her vivid imagery ( if this were a summer darkness in Ireland the morning would already be stored in the midnight ) will beguile many.