Read Dickinson's Misery Online
Authors: Virginia; Jackson
Dickinson, William Cowper,
140
â
142
,
230
Dickinson Editorial Collective,
46
â
53
,
208
Dickinson Electronic Archives,
45
â
49
,
197
,
260n.16
Diehl, Joanne Feit,
77
,
209
,
246n.12
,
264n.50
Dobson, Joanne,
269n.5
Douglas, Ann,
270nn.14 and 16
Dowling, William C.,
258n.69
Eberwein, Jane,
265n.2
editions of Dickinson's poems:
Bolts of Melody
, ed. Bingham,
22
,
34
â
46
,
69
,
135
,
205
,
220
; Dickinson Electronic Archives, ed. Dickinson Editorial Collective,
45
â
49
;
The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson
, ed. Franklin,
20
,
40
â
41
;
New Poems of Emily Dickinson
, ed. Shurr,
35
â
36
;
Poems by Emily Dickinson
, 1890, ed. Higginson and Todd,
58
,
75
,
126
â
129
,
143
,
181
;
Poems by Emily Dickinson
, 1891, ed. Higginson and Todd,
127
;
The Poems of Emily Dickinson
,
ed. Franklin,
4
â
6
,
11
â
12
,
23
â
24
,
31
â
32
,
36
â
37
,
135
,
142
â
143
,
166
,
177
,
220
;
The Poems of Emily Dickinson
, ed. Johnson,
3
â
4
,
11
â
12
,
23
â
24
,
34
,
69
,
124
,
135
,
142
,
176
;
Radical Scatters
, ed. Werner,
50
â
52
;
The Single Hound
, ed. Bianchi,
162
,
199
.
See also
reception of Dickinson's poems
Edwards, Brent,
52
Emerson, Ralph Waldo: “Fate,”
158
; “New Poetry,”
58
,
126
; “The Rhodora,”
232
,
254n.22
enclosures in and additions to Dickinson's writing: dead cricket,
91
; gravestone sketch,
153
;
New England Primer
cut-outs,
141
,
229
; paper nightingale,
229
; pencil,
136
; postage stamp with clippings from
Harper's Weekly
,
168
; postmarked leaf,
12
; queen's head,
203
.
See also
birds: paper
“fascicles” (Dickinson's manuscript books),
20
,
40
â
45
,
57
â
62
,
142
â
150
Ferry, Anne,
252n.64
Fineman, Joel,
265n.59
Fish, Stanley,
246n.9
Fletcher, Angus,
244n.25
Foucault, Michel:
The Archaeology of Knowledge
,
52
,
227
;
The Order of Things
,
272n.33
, “What is an Author?”
39
,
177
Fowler, Alistair,
242n.8
Franchot, Jenny,
253n.18
Franklin, R. W.,
The Editing of Emily Dickinson,
38
â
40
;
The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson
,
40
â
42
; “Manuscripts and Transcripts of âFurther in Summer than the Birds,'”
253n.14
;
The Master Letters of Emily Dickinson
,
267n.32
;
The Poems of Emily Dickinson
,
4
,
24
,
31
,
36
â
38
,
60
,
63
,
64
,
71
,
177
,
241n.1
,
246n.7
,
252nn.5 and 7
,
262n.33
.
See also
editions of Dickinson's poems
Frederickson, George M.,
270n.14
Fried, Michael,
184
â
185
,
262n.31
Frye, Northrop,
130
Fuss, Diana,
251n.60
,
262n.30
,
265n.3
Genette, Gérard,
8
genres of poetry: ballad,
131
,
140
,
160
; carpe diem,
227
; elegy,
187
â
189
; medley,
120
,
137
; miscellaneous,
7
,
10
,
235
; ode,
162
,
105
â
107
,
225
â
226
;
siste viator
,
170
â
174
; sonnet,
77
â
78
,
102
â
103
; valentine,
137
â
142
.
See also
lyricization
Gilbert, Sandra, and Susan Gubar,
174
â
178
,
193
,
222
â
223
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von,
180
â
181
Goldberg, Jonathan,
266n.12
Gourgouris, Stathis,
256n.48
Graff, Gerald,
247n.15
,
255n.38
,
256n.44
Griswold, Rufus Wilmot,
212
â
219
Grossman, Allen,
43
â
44
,
71
,
268n.38
Gruesz, Kirsten Silva,
243n.19
Gubar, Susan, and Sandra Gilbert,
174
â
178
,
193
,
222
â
223
Guillén, Claudio,
52
Guillory, John,
247n.16
,
255n.39
,
258n.66
Habegger, Alfred,
252n.2
,
254n.24
,
259n.5
Habermas, Jürgen,
260n.11
Hamilton, Gail (Mary Abigail Dodge),
213
â
215
handwriting,
1
â
6
,
16
â
20
,
21
â
24
,
32
â
38
,
40
â
42
,
44
â
53
,
57
â
62
,
135
â
142
,
171
â
177
,
192
â
196
.
See also
print
Harries, Elizabeth Wanning,
250n.42
Harries, Martin,
267n.27
Harrington, Joseph,
243n.19
Hart, Ellen,
125
â
126
,
241n.1
,
253n.16
,
264n.54
Heidegger, Martin,
249n.35
,
258n.70
Hendler, Glenn,
270n.11
Higginson, Thomas Wentworth: “Emily Dickinson's Letters,”
16
â
20
; notes and letters about Dickinson,
241n.1
,
262n.33
; as editor of
Poems
, 1890,
58
,
75
,
126
â
128
,
165
; as recipient of Dickinson's manuscripts,
62
,
79
â
83
,
150
,
224
,
254n.25
; “Sappho,”
218
;
Women and the Alphabet
,
179
â
181
.
See also
editions of Dickinson's poems
;
reception of Dickinson's poems
Hirsch, E. D.,
112
Hölderlin, Friedrich,
114
Holland, Elizabeth,
151
Holland, Jeanne,
167
Homans, Margaret,
4
,
208
,
241n.5
,
256n.48
,
267n.33
Horowitz, Helen,
251n.58
Howe, Susan:
The Birth-mark
,
37
,
51
,
115
â
116
,
125
,
177
â
178
,
197
â
198
,
208
;
My Emily Dickinson
,
51
,
267n.33
;
Pierce-Arrow
,
266n.22
Howells, William Dean,
28
,
129
,
218
Huyssen, Andreas,
247n.14
insurance industry, U.S.,
251n.59
Irving, Washington,
160
Jackson, Helen Hunt,
62
,
254n.26
Jackson, Virginia: “Longfellow's Tradition,”
266n.17
; “Lyrical Studies,”
244n.22
Jameson, Frederic,
256n.48
,
257n.49
Jarrell, Randall,
171
Johnson, Barbara,
257n.51
,
264n.51
Johnson, Thomas H.,
The Poems of Emily Dickinson
,
2
â
4
,
13
,
34
,
71
,
77
,
124
,
142
,
176
,
241n.1
,
273n.2
.
See also
editions of Dickinson's poems
Johnson, W. R.,
242n.8
Juhl, P. D.,
112
Kaufman, Robert,
256n.48
Keats, John: “Ode to a Nightingale,”
26
,
199
,
226
; “On the Grasshopper and the Cricket,”
77
; “Sonnet” (“When I have fears that I will cease to be”),
114
; “This living hand,”
203
.
See also
birds
Kerkering, John D.,
243n.19
Knapp, Steven,
110
â
114
,
273n.35
Kopytoff, Igor,
254n.28
Kramnick, Jonathan Brody,
243n.14
Krieger, Murrary,
255n.38
Lacan, Jacques,
13
,
152
,
244n.26
,
264n.59
Lee, Benjamin,
250n.50
Lentricchia, Frank,
255n.39
,
257n.61
Lerer, Seth,
242n.8
Letters: alphabetic,
140
â
142
; as incarnate,
178
â
185
; as “letter-poems,”
49
; as material forms of address,
133
â
140
; as poems,
68
â
92
,
118
â
165
,
228
â
133
.
See also
Dickinson, Emily, letters
Levinson, Marjorie,
250n.42
Leyda, Jay,
3
,
166
,
237
,
252n.1
,
262n.35
,
263n.45
,
267n.26
,
273n.2
Lincoln, Abraham, assassination of,
76
â
78
Loeffelholz, Mary,
20
;
Dickinson and the Boundaries of Feminist Theory
,
208
,
254n.19
,
263n.46
,
265n.6
,
269n.4
;
From School to Salon
,
210
,
243n.19
,
247n.23
,
251nn.58 and 63
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth,
121
â
122
,
266n.17
.
See also
Carlo
Longsworth, Polly,
255n.31
Lootens, Tricia,
210
Love, Harold,
47
Lowenberg, Carlton,
260n.12
Lubbers, Karl,
245n.27
.
See also
reception of Dickinson's poems
Lubbock, Percy,
128
Lukács, Georg,
114
lyric reading,
10
â
11
,
14
â
15
,
202
; as capacious,
235
â
236
as collective defense,
204
; as Dickinson's subject,
199
,
223
â
234
; double bind of,
67
; fictive historical pathos of,
92
; as genre-forming,
52
; as historically redemptive,
30
; as inevitable,
159
,
235
; late-nineteenth-century version of,
27
; of medley,
139
; as performed by de Man,
99
â
109
; as personification,
126
; phenomenology of,
24
; protocols of,
116
; sentimentalism as,
209
â
212
; social resonance of,
70
; temporality of,
57
.
See also
genres of poetry
;
lyricization