“What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of Shakespeare

H.D. is both a familiar figure of the Imagist movement fashioned by Ezra Pound and an elusive author of “high modernism.” Primarily known as a poet, H.D. wrote a lot of posthumously published autobiographical prose to disentangle herself from the enshrouding influence of Imagism and the “war trauma....

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Main Author: Claire Conilleau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Française d'Etudes Américaines 2010-09-01
Series:Transatlantica : Revue d'Études Américaines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/4801
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spelling doaj-5d8d19f02ba343c59d246371526115f52021-09-02T18:11:42ZengAssociation Française d'Etudes AméricainesTransatlantica : Revue d'Études Américaines1765-27662010-09-01110.4000/transatlantica.4801“What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of ShakespeareClaire ConilleauH.D. is both a familiar figure of the Imagist movement fashioned by Ezra Pound and an elusive author of “high modernism.” Primarily known as a poet, H.D. wrote a lot of posthumously published autobiographical prose to disentangle herself from the enshrouding influence of Imagism and the “war trauma.” Shakespeare is a powerful ally for he embodies the intersection between the personal and the literary, the real and the fictional. His plays underwrite H.D.’s autobiographical prose in relation to family, history and identity. H.D. excavates Shakespeare and his plays to reinscribe them in a new body of work – a strategy which enables her to engage with the male literary history and re-vise it by establishing a familial rather than adversarial relation to tradition. This article envisions the complex interactions between Shakespeare’s text and H.D.’s prose as the cornerstone of her positioning as woman writer in the economy of literary creation. It explores the creative diversions and reappropriations of Shakespeare’s plays that H.D. resorts to, especially her play with onomastics, the evocations and inscriptions of the Bard and his plays in the body of her works as well as a lesser known text, By Avon River, whose theme is Shakespeare himself.http://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/4801genderH.D.literary traditionnamespalimpsestperformance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claire Conilleau
spellingShingle Claire Conilleau
“What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of Shakespeare
Transatlantica : Revue d'Études Américaines
gender
H.D.
literary tradition
names
palimpsest
performance
author_facet Claire Conilleau
author_sort Claire Conilleau
title “What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of Shakespeare
title_short “What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of Shakespeare
title_full “What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of Shakespeare
title_fullStr “What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of Shakespeare
title_full_unstemmed “What’s in a Name?”: H.D.’s Re-Vision of Shakespeare
title_sort “what’s in a name?”: h.d.’s re-vision of shakespeare
publisher Association Française d'Etudes Américaines
series Transatlantica : Revue d'Études Américaines
issn 1765-2766
publishDate 2010-09-01
description H.D. is both a familiar figure of the Imagist movement fashioned by Ezra Pound and an elusive author of “high modernism.” Primarily known as a poet, H.D. wrote a lot of posthumously published autobiographical prose to disentangle herself from the enshrouding influence of Imagism and the “war trauma.” Shakespeare is a powerful ally for he embodies the intersection between the personal and the literary, the real and the fictional. His plays underwrite H.D.’s autobiographical prose in relation to family, history and identity. H.D. excavates Shakespeare and his plays to reinscribe them in a new body of work – a strategy which enables her to engage with the male literary history and re-vise it by establishing a familial rather than adversarial relation to tradition. This article envisions the complex interactions between Shakespeare’s text and H.D.’s prose as the cornerstone of her positioning as woman writer in the economy of literary creation. It explores the creative diversions and reappropriations of Shakespeare’s plays that H.D. resorts to, especially her play with onomastics, the evocations and inscriptions of the Bard and his plays in the body of her works as well as a lesser known text, By Avon River, whose theme is Shakespeare himself.
topic gender
H.D.
literary tradition
names
palimpsest
performance
url http://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/4801
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