Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/25029

TítuloDramatising the conflicts of nation and the body: displacement in Charlotte and Emily Brontë’s poetry of "Home and Exile" dualities
Autor(es)Guimarães, Paula Alexandra
Palavras-chaveBrontës
Poetry
Home
Exile
Body
Nation
Data2008
EditoraUniversidad de Zaragoza. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras
RevistaMiscelánea: a Journal of English and American Studies. Literature, Film and Cultural Studies
Resumo(s)For Gregory Orr, the best way to respond to the chaotic unpredictability of our being is through the personal lyric because it “dramatizes inner and outer experience” by “clinging to embodied being”. The self in the personal lyric of the Brontës (Charlotte and Emily) is either ‘home’ or ‘away’, facing internal or external division or fracture, and in search of a prospective identity (personal and national) or a chosen location. The conflicts of nation (whether they are presented in a real or fictionalised manner) are simultaneously reflected in the conflicts of the body itself; and the word ‘home’ – a metaphor for both ‘place’ and ‘being’ – assumes a nuance of different but related meanings (from the familiar hearth and the exalted homeland to the poet’s mind, Nature or God’s bosom). There is an evasive attempt to overcome social and political coercions that create both confinement and displacement, but whether the Brontës choose to stay at home or are compelled to leave, they remain as ‘exiles’. Ultimately, for these poets, it will be exilic displacement which will act as a ‘spur to creativity’ and define authorship.
TipoArtigo
URIhttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/25029
ISSN1137-6368
Versão da editorahttp://www.miscelaneajournal.net/index.php/misc
Arbitragem científicayes
AcessoAcesso aberto
Aparece nas coleções:CEHUM - Artigos publicados em revistas

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