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The Grief of Influence Heather Clark (Professor of Literature at Marlboro College and Adjunct Instructor of Irish Studies at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House)

The Grief of Influence By Heather Clark (Professor of Literature at Marlboro College and Adjunct Instructor of Irish Studies at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House)

Summary

The Grief of Influence follows Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes through alternating periods of collaboation and competition, showing how each poet forged a voice both through and against the other's, and offering a new assessment of the twentieth century's most important poetic partnership.

The Grief of Influence Summary

The Grief of Influence: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes by Heather Clark (Professor of Literature at Marlboro College and Adjunct Instructor of Irish Studies at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House)

Throughout their marriage, Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes engaged in a complex and continually evolving poetic dialogue about writing, love, and grief. Although scholars have commented extensively on the biographical details of Plath's and Hughes's marriage, few have undertaken a systematic intertextual analysis of the poets' work. The Grief of Influence reappraises this extraordinary literary partnership, and shows that the aesthetic and ideological similarities that provided a foundation for Plath's and Hughes's creative marriage - such as their mutual fascination with D. H. Lawrence and motifs of violence and war - intensified their artistic rivalry. Through close readings of both poets' work and analysis of new archival sources, Clark reveals for the first time how extensively Plath borrowed from Hughes and Hughes borrowed from Plath. She also explores the transatlantic dynamics of Plath's and Hughes's 'colonial' marriage within the context of the 1950s Anglo-American poetry scene and demonstrates how each poet's misreadings of the other contributed to the damaging stereotypes that now dominate the Plath-Hughes mythology. Following Plath and Hughes through alternating periods of collaboration and competition, The Grief of Influence shows how each poet forged a voice both through and against the other's, and offers a new assessment of the twentieth century's most important poetic partnership.

The Grief of Influence Reviews

Heather Clark has given the story a new twist ... chapters on Hughes and the late Plath are excellently done. They document vividly and with scholarly authority how creatively involved the couple were with each other. * John Xiros Cooper, Notes and Queries *
The range of Clark's comparative approach is impressive... Clark writes with admirable clarity and perspicacity, and offers a study that is both broad and deep; it is testament to the poise, grace, and generosity of this book that it might work as an introduction to Plath and Hughes's work for an undergraduate or a careful refinement of an ongoing debate. * William May, English *
Clark's lucid and meticulous project traces the poets' careers through a series of shared concerns ... before exploring the way they continually 'remade' each other throughout the careers, and posthumously. ... The range of Clark's comparative approach is impressive here ... Clark writes with admirable clarity and perspicacity, and offers a study that is both broad and deep; it is a testament to the poise, grace, and generosity of this book that it might work as an introduction to Plath and Hughes's work for an undergraduate or a careful refinement of an ongoing debate. * William May, English *
a significant book ... Clark not only clarifies the troubled relationship between Hughes and Plath, but also advances our ideas about how to understand literary influence, especially among artistic couples ... appreciated by students of Hughes and Plath, who will gain myriad new insights about the two. * Diederik Oostdijk, English Studies *

About Heather Clark (Professor of Literature at Marlboro College and Adjunct Instructor of Irish Studies at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House)

Heather Clark is Professor of Literature at Marlboro College and teaches Irish Studies at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House. She is the author of The Ulster Renaissance: Poetry in Belfast 1962-1972 (OUP, 2006), which won the Donald Murphy Prize for Distinguished First Book and the Robert Rhodes Prize for Books on Literature from the American Conference for Irish Studies. She has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and Emory University's Manuscript, Archive, and Rare Book Library, and reviews Irish poetry regularly for the Harvard Review. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and daughter.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION ; 1. Affinities and Assimilations ; 2. Secret Anxieties ; 3. The Other Two ; 4. Colonial Contexts ; 5. The Early Dialogue ; 6. Disarming the Enemy ; 7. Tracking the Thought-Fox ; 8. Hughes's Plath ; 9. Crow and Counter-revision ; 10. The Old Factory Demolished: Wodwo to Moortown ; 11. Fixed Stars: Birthday Letters ; BIBLIOGRAPHY

Additional information

NPB9780199558193
9780199558193
0199558191
The Grief of Influence: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes by Heather Clark (Professor of Literature at Marlboro College and Adjunct Instructor of Irish Studies at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2010-12-09
270
Winner of Named 2011 Outstanding Academic Title by CHOICE.
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