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عنوان
An examination of the notions of "masculinity" and "femininity" in the poetry and prose of Ted Hughes and Seamus Heaney

پدید آورنده
Davis, Alex

موضوع
Literature

رده

کتابخانه
Center and Library of Islamic Studies in European Languages

محل استقرار
استان: Qom ـ شهر: Qom

Center and Library of Islamic Studies in European Languages

تماس با کتابخانه : 32910706-025

NATIONAL BIBLIOGRAPHY NUMBER

Number
TLets242469

TITLE AND STATEMENT OF RESPONSIBILITY

Title Proper
An examination of the notions of "masculinity" and "femininity" in the poetry and prose of Ted Hughes and Seamus Heaney
General Material Designation
[Thesis]
First Statement of Responsibility
Davis, Alex

.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC

Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
University of Sheffield
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
1991

DISSERTATION (THESIS) NOTE

Dissertation or thesis details and type of degree
Ph.D.
Body granting the degree
University of Sheffield
Text preceding or following the note
1991

SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT

Text of Note
Throughout Ted Hughes' work, the "lack" that he sees as the fundamental constituent of Western culture is approached in terms of gender. His work is informed by the belief that the history of patriarchal civilization is a record of exile from a plenitude of being, an Imaginary unity with what is troped as a maternal nature. The role of literature is, in some way, to restore the alienated subject to fulfilment, the latter taking two forms: an expanded, visionary male, in the quest-romances of the 1970s, who bears comparison with Blake's Sons of Eternity: and, in his later poetry, a less hyperbolic quasi-Wordsworthian worshipper of a humanized, feminine nature. In the case of Seamus Heaney, whilst the prose explores modes of writing revolving around a masculine/feminine polarity, the vexed issues of colonialism and nationalism prompt, in the 1970s, a series of "sexual conceits" which express his sense of alienation from a motherland violated by "masculine" imperial ism. The archetypal and mythic parallels which inform these concerns come under increasing scrutiny in the more recent work, which, in a comparable manner to Hughes, can be read as a -demythologizing" of earlier preoccupations. What both writers' use of gender reveals is an intense engagement with history; their notions of masculinity and femininity are to be seen as part of a formal attempt to find aesthetic resolutions to socio-political conditions which, in various ways, limit and circumscribe individual desire and gratification.

TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT

Literature

PERSONAL NAME - PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY

Davis, Alex

CORPORATE BODY NAME - SECONDARY RESPONSIBILITY

University of Sheffield

ELECTRONIC LOCATION AND ACCESS

Electronic name
 مطالعه متن کتاب 

p

[Thesis]
276903

a
Y

Proposal/Bug Report

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