Conclusion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2014
Summary
This analysis of a selection of Emily Dickinson's texts confirms the notion that suffering occupies the principal position in the poet's work. Her poetry constitutes an example of a painful literary quest for subjectivity as well as an act of self-transcendence, which means that through her writing the poet obtained conscious control over her personal anguish. By using pain as a poetic strategy she transformed her private biography into a literary text. In this way she became a model for coping with suffering and using it for self-examination and self-development.
In Emily Dickinson's poems suffering creates a new language and a new outlook on the self and the world. During the investigation of her poetic texts three dimensions of suffering as a poetic strategy have been distinguished: suffering as a theme, suffering as a subversive force affecting the language and suffering as a form of poetic expression. The critical tool used for this analysis was the theory of Julia Kristeva, who emphasises these elements as crucial in the interpretation of literary texts.
In Kristeva's theory the process of creation is a sublimation of “mourning” for the lost Thing: “the elusive preobject” (Kristeva 152), which should be understood as the indefinable source of contentment. Brutal separation from a mother's comfort leads to a constant quest for a satisfactory equivalent. The lack the subject feels becomes a source of creative expression.
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- Writing LifeSuffering as a Poetic Strategy of Emily Dickinson, pp. 81 - 84Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2011