Echoes of Sapphic Gods and Goddesses, Immortality, Eros and Thanatos in the Work of Modernist Women Poets
Echoes of Sapphic Gods and Goddesses, Immortality, Eros and Thanatos in the Work of Modernist Women Poets
Author(s): Iris RusuSubject(s): Gender Studies, Cultural history, Poetry, Ancient World, Greek Literature
Published by: Editura Universitatii LUCIAN BLAGA din Sibiu
Keywords: Sappho’s poetry; Ancient Greek poetry; Modernism; modernist women poets; stylized and interiorized mythological concerns; literature as palimpsest;
Summary/Abstract: In the context of Modernism’s constant return to the past that results in self-knowledge and innovation, certain women writers found Sappho’s writings relevant for their own poetic endeavours. My article will mainly focus on the mythological aspects of both Sappho’s and the modernist women’s poetry. Invocations of and allusions to gods and goddesses and other mythical figures, which involve introspection and expressing certain erotic concerns in stylised ways, will be discussed in order to show how all these women poets innovated. and, in many different ways, significantly enriched the literature of their times. Critics have mainly focused on H.-D.’s poetry in relation to Sappho’s, most likely because the modernist poet had also translated (or adapted, according to most scholars) a number of Sappho’s poems. As regards other modernist women poets, such as, for instance, Amy Lowell or Marianne Moore, critics have refrained, for various reasons, from analysing their work in relation to Sappho’s. There are very few critical accounts of Sappho’s influence on their (and even H.-D.’s) poetry, and this article will, perforce, draw on these, but aims, all the while, to provide new and relevant insights.
Journal: East-West Cultural Passage
- Issue Year: 20/2020
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 83-108
- Page Count: 26
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF