Introduction to Literature.ppt
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1、Introduction to Literature,Lesson FIVE: Roethke and plath Family Relationships,Margarette Connor,Outline,Theodore Roethke “intentional fallacy” “My Papas Waltz” discussion Sylvia Plath “Daddy” discussion,Theodore Roethke (1908-1963),Considered by many critics to be one of the most important American
2、 poets of the 20th century.,His influence,“Roethkes pioneering explorations of nature, regional settings, depth psychology, and personal confessionalism-coupled with his stylistic innovations in open form poetics and his mastery of traditional, fixed forms-have secured his reputation as one of the m
3、ost distinguished and widely read American poets of the twentieth century.” American National Biography.,Early life,Born in Saginaw, Michigan. Son of Otto Roethke and Helen Huebner As a child, he spent much time in the greenhouse owned by his father and uncle. impressions of the natural world contai
4、ned there would later profoundly influence the subjects and imagery of his verse. When he was 15, his father died of cancer would powerfully shape Roethkes psychic and creative lives.,Education,1925 to 1929 at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, graduating magna cum laude. Resisting family pres
5、sure to pursue a legal career, he quit law school after one semester 1929 to 1931, he took graduate courses at the University of Michigan and later the Harvard Graduate School, where he worked closely with the poet Robert Hillyer. The Great Depression forced Roethke to leave Harvard and to take up t
6、eaching at Lafayette College from 1931 to 1935.,Beginning career,In the fall of 1935 Roethke assumed his second teaching post at Michigan State College at Lansing soon hospitalized for what would prove to be recurring bouts of mental illness. Throughout his subsequent career Roethke used these perio
7、dic incidents of depression for creative self-exploration. They allowed him, as he said, to “reach a new level of reality.” Taught at Pennsylvania State Univ, 1936 - 1943, publishing in Poetry, the New Republic, the Saturday Review, and Sewanee Review.,First book,Open House (1941), took ten years to
8、 write Critically acclaimed upon its publication. Many poets influenced the work, including TS Eliot, but the books subjective focus on personal experience marked an important departure from T. S. Eliots doctrine of poetic impersonality, stated in “Tradition and the Individual Talent,“ (1917), and f
9、rom what the New Critics W. K. Wimsatt and Monroe Beardsley later deplored as the intentional fallacy.,Intentional fallacy:,“Many modern critics regard a literary work as a public document, complete in itself, and the writers intention of writing the work, if he had one other than the invariable int
10、entional of writing the work, an external irrelevance. The error in judging a work by the authors success or failure in achieving his intention these critics call the intentional or generic failure. (cont),TS Eliot,More on intentional fallacy,In The Verbal Icon, Wimsatt and Beardsley wrote, The poem
11、 is not the critics own and not the authors (it is detached from the author at birth and goes about the world beyond his power to intend upon it or control it). The poem belongs to the public.What is said about the poem such as the poets statement of intention is subject to the same scrutiny as any
12、statement in linguistics or in the general science of psychology.”) definition from Beckson and Ganz, Literary Terms, a Dictionary,Bennington years,In 1943 he left Penn State to teach at Bennington College, a major arts school in America, known for the number of writers who teach/attend,Important se
13、cond book,1948 published second, pivotal, volume, The Lost Son and Other Poems. Includes “My Papas Waltz” In the so-called “greenhouse poems,“ the metaphor of the open house passes into the figure of the glasshouse as the dominant symbol of the selfs interior, existential world.,Roethke on his work,
14、In “An American Poet Introduces Himself and His Poems“ (BBC broadcast, 30 July 1953), Roethke described the glasshouse, as “both heaven and hell It was a universe, several worlds, which, even as a child, one worried about, and struggled to keep alive.“,Last ten years: height of his popularity,worked
15、 last at the University of Washington, where he was mentor to a generation of Northwest poets 1953 married Beatrice OConnell, whom he had met during his earlier stint at Bennington reputation grew with each new collection, including The Waking which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1954. 1955 and 1
16、956 Roethkes traveled in Italy, Europe, and England on a Fulbright grant. 1957 published Words for the Wind, which won all sorts of prizes for poetry Died in 1963, at the height of his popularity.,My Papas Waltz (1),The whiskey on your breath Could make a small boy dizzy; But I hung on like death: S
17、uch waltzing was not easy. We romped until the pans Slid from the kitchen shelf; My mothers countenance Could not unfrown itself. We see family dynamics here; the little boy is clinging to his father, hes a little bit afraid; her mother is not happy,My Papas Waltz (2),The hand that held my wrist Was
18、 battered on one knuckle; At every step you missed My right ear scraped a buckle. a painful memory for the little boy but also NOT a painful memory,My Papas Waltz (3),You beat time on my head With a palm caked hard by dirt, Then waltzed me off to bed Still clinging to your shirt. The title “Papa,” t
19、he author chooses the familiar and the affectionate; and Waltz is the loving dance; theres pain and fear here, but theres also love and affection.other interpretation of this poem the child is being abused?,Sylvia Plath (1932-1963),Mixed reactions to her poems her suicide and relationship with her h
20、usband Ted Hughes, who later became Britains Poet Laureate, often color reaction to her works.,Parents,Daughter of Otto Plath and Aurelia Schober, German immigrants to the US. Father an entomologist who taught at Boston University Mother later taught secretarial skills there,Fathers early death,1940
21、 Father died when Plath was 8 of diabetes mellitus, which at the time was a very curable disease. Upon his death a friend only asked, “How could such a brilliant man have been so stupid?“ The disease contributed to gangrene in his toe, which turned black from the disease. This appears in “Daddy”.,Ea
22、rly education,Excellent and hardworking student, had already published some of her stories and poetry before she left high school. Her first poem appeared when she was eight in the Boston Herald (10 August 1941, page B-8) Scholarship to Smith College, an excellent womans college in Massachusetts. En
23、tered in September 1950.,Schoolgirl Plath,Early successes,Beginning in 1950 began publishing in national periodicals. “Youths Appeal for World Peace” published Christian Science Monitor ,16 March. Short story “And Summer Will Not Come Again“ appeared August Seventeen Poem “Bitter Strawberries“ appea
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