Homeward Dove: Nomadism, “World”-Travelling, and Rita Dove’s Homecoming(s)
Homeward Dove: Nomadism, “World”-Travelling, and Rita Dove’s Homecoming(s)
Author(s): Jerzy KamionowskiSubject(s): Literary Texts
Published by: Wydział Filologiczny Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku
Keywords: black(ness); Black Arts Movement; cosmopolitanism; cultural mulatto; homecoming(s); nomadism; universalism; “world”-travelling
Summary/Abstract: This article focuses on the question of changing landscapes in Rita Dove’s poetry, and its strict connection with her redefinition of the identity and role of a black poet. A constant movement through various sceneries in terms of space, culture and intellectual concerns is a distinguishing feature of Dove’s poetry. My analysis of her poems sets into motion an interplay of concepts such as: Lugones’s “world”-travelling, Braidotti’s nomadism, Frye’s arrogant perception, Kent's legitimate universal and Ellis's cultural mulatto-ism. The purpose of this strategy is to demonstrate that Dove’s poetry permanently operates between the poles of nomadism and homecoming(s), where the two terms are not perceived as antinomical and mutually exclusive but as dialectical, mutually complementary. As a result, Dove avoids being pigeonholed as either an integrationist or separatist poet, transcending the traditional binary critical categories of classifying American black poets.
Journal: Crossroads. A Journal of English Studies
- Issue Year: 2013
- Issue No: 03 (3)
- Page Range: 12-21
- Page Count: 10