Thomas Gardner argues in this original study that we are just beginning, as a culture, to understand the far-reaching implications of Emily Dickinson's work. Looking at the way quite different writers have enacted and fleshed-out crucial aspects of her poetry, Gardner gives us a Dickinson for our times. Beginning with the work of Lucie Brock-Broido, Alice Fulton, Kathleen Fraser, and Robert Hass, Gardner moves on to analytical chapters and fully developed conversations with four writers in whose work he finds the fullest extension of Dickinson's legacy. The interviews with these four--Marilynne Robinson, Charles Wright, Susan Howe, and Jorie Graham--provide a particularly intimate look at writers at work.
In returning to Dickinson's work, Gardner observes, contemporary writers have powerfully extended what he calls her poetics of broken responsiveness in which an acknowledgment of limits leads, paradoxically, to a deep engagement with a world beyond our capacity to master or possess. In the hands of our most important poets and novelists, Dickinson's emptying of the articulate self has become a potent means of addressing some of our culture's fundamental erotic, religious, philosophical, and social questions.
A Door Ajarmakes visible the Dickinson that will matter to writers and readers over the next several decades.
What a brilliant book!
A Door Ajarcuts across genres and eras to reveal the continuing influence of Emily Dickinson in American writing by thinking about and talking to some of our best writers of prose and poetry. This book offers a chance to spend time with some of the keenest literary intelligence we have. It's a feast. --Robert Hass, University of California at Berkeley
Thomas Gardneris Clifford Cutchins III Professor of English at Virginia Tech. Among his other books are
Discovering Ourselves in Whitman: The Contemporary American Long Poemand
Regions of Unlikeness: Explaininl³Á