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Adrienne Rich |
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¹Ï¤ù¨Ó·½¡Ghttp://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/rich/rich.htm |
¥Dn¤åÃþ¡GPoem |
¸ê®Æ´£¨ÑªÌ¡GJulia Hsieh/Á¨Øæ¢ |
ÃöÁä¦rµü¡GEkphrasis; Essay |
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Adrienne
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Julia
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Julia
Hsieh/Á¨Øæ¢
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Biographic Sketch
Her Works
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Biographic
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Not simply as a renowned feminist poet, Adrienne Rich is the one of
America 's best poets, according to Margaret Atwood that speaks for
many others. Her poems and writings touch on the topics on feminism,
lesbianism and other social issues; in view of her critical view toward
societal observation, Rich is considered one of the major and leading
role in social activity. |
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A. Family Background and Education |
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On May 16 th, 1929, Adrienne Rich was born in Baltimore,
Maryland, to physician Arnold Rich and musician Helen Elizabeth Jones.
Mrs. Rich quit her professional musician position and devoted her life
to her daughters and domestic affairs after Mr. Rich's professions as a
physician and later an esteemed professor had taken off. Though
home-schooled until she was nine years old, Rich was well protected
from Depression and fully educated with the access to her father's
library of the poems, classics and Victorian literature, under the
strict disciplines and high standards of Arnold Rich. She was indulged
by the vast readings and encouraged to create her own works. It was her
phenomenal childhood in this literary-cultivated family that later sent
Rich away to Radeliffe College, where she received a Bachelor degree in
1951, had her first poetry collection, A Change of World,
published and had her name introduced to the poetry society by W. H.
Auden, who chose her to be the recipient of Yale Younger Poets Award.
The following year, the Guggenheim Fellowship granted her enough funds
to travel throughout Europe. She returned home to States and married
Alfred G. Conrad, a Harvard economist/scholar. Rich has three sons with
Conrad, David, Paul and Jacob, and the next six years, she was engaged
with her domestic life, and according to Amy Siekels, she almost
disappeared from the literary world for eight years, due to family
obligation and the role of a devoted mother and wife. Despite all,
those years residing in Cambridge, Massachusetts, were topped by her
national distinction later because of the publication of Snapshots
of a Daughter-in-Law in 1963.
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B. An acknowledged poet in action |
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Aside from her prominence in poetry, Rich is well known for her active
participation in social and political events. The collection of her
poetry has not merely signified her transformation, but pushed her
forward to speak out and fight for Civil Rights and Women's Liberation
Movement in 1950s and 1960s. In the ¡¥70s, she plunged into anti-war
activities, and continued to crusades for the injustice of sexism,
homophobia, women's rights and other social-related issues. After
long-time feeling restrained and frustrated in domestic-circle-ridden
life, through active participation in social events, Rich reached out
to the world with her concerns to her society, the neglected people and
with her talents to show the world her concerns. What's more dramatic,
five years after Alfred Conrad committed suicide in 1970, Rich came out
of the closet to claim her sexuality as a lesbian and developed a
life-long relationship with Michelle Cliff. Moreover, besides winning
more awards and fellowships for her works, Rich has taken academic
positions in prestigious colleges and universities in view of her
efforts and achievement.
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Her Works |
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As David St. John has remarked that Rich's works, essays
and poetry will continue to influence feminism throughout States and
the whole world, most critics deem Rich's poems overwhelmingly
artistic, imaginative and innovative in terms of portraying women and
indicating or criticizing the injustice of racial discrimination,
exploitation of the minority and homosexuality.
Rich's works are usually analyzed and studied in
discrete aspects. For instance, Liz Yorke finds that "[e]legance,
evasion, reserve and decorum mark Rich'es poised and dignified early
poems" (23), while Cheri Colby Langdell indicates the binary opposition
of voices of the dominant story and the muted one, which represent male
dominance and female silence or acquiesce respectively. Langdell also
comments on common features in many poems in A Change of
World: "The tone is detached and refined; the style is the
terse, dry, impersonal style characteristic of formalist poetry" (15).
Rich's second book of poems, The Diamond Cutters and Other
Poems (1955), is similar to her first book, with stylish
exquisite depiction of her travels and expeditions overseas and some
domestic issues. Later on, in her prize-winning poetry collection Snapshots
of a Daughter-in-Law: Poems 1954-1962, she revealed senses
of isolation and loneliness she had felt during the confinement of
motherhood and womanhood by social expectation. Yorke regards the poem
"Snapshots" that takes the position of the female that "breaks out of
the oppressive expectations ¡V of the male-dominated publishing houses,
literary critics, academic establishments and the rest" (31); she is
convinced that Rich starts to take up "a liberal feminist stance" (33)
and yet, a reserved one.
As many critics have criticized and realized, Rich's Snapshots
of a Daughter-in-Law has transformed her style and
trajectory due to the awakening feminist consciousness. The following
poetry collection ¡V Necessities of Life: Poems 1962-1965 ¡V
further arouses critics' and readers' attention by its prominent
transformation. This transformation of styles and issues has raised
criticism as well as applauds. Craig Werner has pointed out that by
1960s, Rich's concern on feminist issues and themes on patriarchy
paradox which have been disclosed and reoccurring in her poems have
somehow presented her "almost simultaneously with the emergence of the
critical image [¡K] as an obsessive man-hater" (37). The Will
to Change, likewise, includes Rich's worries and
dissatisfaction toward patriarchal control, manipulation and
contemporary social complex toward both genders. Gradually, Rich deals
with more than the inequality of men and women and personal issues, but
unveils her preoccupation of political beliefs.
Rich's innovation astounds the readers and critics by
her experiment with different ways of expression in her creation,
including her imitation of film-making techniques which she adapts and
procreates the approaches of jump cuts, collage or freeze frames into
her poems. Diving into the Wreck: Poems, 1971-1972 and
A wild Ptience Has Taken Me This Far: Poems, 1978-1981 are
considered to be Rich's representation with the stance of a radical
feminist; the poet encourages her contemporary women to be more
conscious and determined to see the blunt truth that women have been
brutally treated as parasitic creatures which men tend to abuse as the
sadistic object. Her works, like The Dream of a Common
Language and The Fact of a Doorframe,
attempt to awake attention through historical facts and female figures
such as Emily Dickinson and Marie Curie thtat exemplify the hardship
and accomplishment women have been through. In Twenty-one
Love Poems, she pushes further to bring out her perspectives
on lesbian sexuality.
Rich's poems are reckoned to be modern, feminist and
flooded with social concerns and compassion for the unjustified
minority. Continuing her explorations on new issues as well as the old
ones like racial and gender inequity, Your Native land, Your
Life, Time's Power, An
Atlas of the Difficult World and Dark Fields of
the Republic can serve as examples that she expresses her
reflection on her own Jewish heritage, on wars, the impacts of wars, on
aging, on societal exploitation of the minority, on identity, on the
rising social problem of the gap between the rich and the poor, and so
on.
Although critics often complain and insinuate opposition to Rich's
drastic condemn on patriarchy and the gender-biased contemporary
society, through her poetry and prose, she indeed makes not merely the
Americans, but the whole world of her readers, to comprehend the
complexity of various social problems and to appreciate and celebrate
their consciousness of finding the problem, facing it and endeavoring
to fix it.
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Reference
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"Adrienne (Cecile) Rich." Contemporary
Author Onlines. Contemporary Authors Online, Thomson Gale,
2005.
"Adrienne Rich." Contemporary Literary
Criticism. Gale.
Langdell, Cheri Colby. Adrienne Rich: The
Moment of Change. Westport: Praeger Publishers, 2004.
Sickels, Amy. Adrienne Rich.
Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 2005.
Werner, Craig. Adrienne Rich: The Poet and
Her Critics. Chicago: American Library Association, 1988.
Yorke, Liz. Adrienne Rich: Passion, Politics and the Body.
London: Sage, 1997.
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