‘Only the Dead Can Be Forgiven’: Contemporary Women Poets and Environmental Melancholia

Ecological crisis challenges the regenerative capacity of nature, revealing all life to exist in anticipation of death. In the face of this realisation, the human subject enters a melancholic state, which, in turn, permits deeper insight into the fate of the more-than-human world. The rhetoric of lo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lucy Collins
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2017-01-01
Series:C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-century Writings
Online Access:http://c21.openlibhums.org/articles/12
Description
Summary:Ecological crisis challenges the regenerative capacity of nature, revealing all life to exist in anticipation of death. In the face of this realisation, the human subject enters a melancholic state, which, in turn, permits deeper insight into the fate of the more-than-human world. The rhetoric of loss, identified by Juliana Schiesari as a key to melancholy, can be traced throughout contemporary poetry, which offers a means to contemplate the temporal rupture of environmental destruction at the same time as it acknowledges the challenges to representation it brings. This essay will explore these dynamics in a range of poems by contemporary Irish and British women, revealing an encounter between the embodied self and nature that has profound effects on the construction of the poetic subject, and on traditional approaches to form.
ISSN:2045-5216
2045-5224