Dickinson’s Ear

This essay pursues the reference to and role of hearing in Emily Dickinson’s poetry. To do so, it studies the 45 Dickinson poems with the singular noun Ear, in its transferred sense as a figure of aural perception. Reading these poems as a set lets us build a model of Dickinson’s Ear, and the model...

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Main Author: Jefferey Simons
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2017-08-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12024
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author Jefferey Simons
author_facet Jefferey Simons
author_sort Jefferey Simons
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description This essay pursues the reference to and role of hearing in Emily Dickinson’s poetry. To do so, it studies the 45 Dickinson poems with the singular noun Ear, in its transferred sense as a figure of aural perception. Reading these poems as a set lets us build a model of Dickinson’s Ear, and the model illuminates the interiorizing motion and the signature resonance in her poetic of hearing. The essay develops the model and the poetic in explication of the poems with Ear, and in its last section conceives the Dickinson auditorium, a space for hearing the sounds in her poetry. As it unfolds, the essay takes the measure of Dickinson’s aural senses of the world and of language, as they arise in poems evoking a wide range of experience.
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series European Journal of American Studies
spelling doaj-art-e8b8b4a8b1584c1db2e0d5829cf83ef52025-01-06T09:09:34ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362017-08-0112210.4000/ejas.12024Dickinson’s EarJefferey SimonsThis essay pursues the reference to and role of hearing in Emily Dickinson’s poetry. To do so, it studies the 45 Dickinson poems with the singular noun Ear, in its transferred sense as a figure of aural perception. Reading these poems as a set lets us build a model of Dickinson’s Ear, and the model illuminates the interiorizing motion and the signature resonance in her poetic of hearing. The essay develops the model and the poetic in explication of the poems with Ear, and in its last section conceives the Dickinson auditorium, a space for hearing the sounds in her poetry. As it unfolds, the essay takes the measure of Dickinson’s aural senses of the world and of language, as they arise in poems evoking a wide range of experience.https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12024perceptionDickinsonhearingsoundpoeticsexperience
spellingShingle Jefferey Simons
Dickinson’s Ear
European Journal of American Studies
perception
Dickinson
hearing
sound
poetics
experience
title Dickinson’s Ear
title_full Dickinson’s Ear
title_fullStr Dickinson’s Ear
title_full_unstemmed Dickinson’s Ear
title_short Dickinson’s Ear
title_sort dickinson s ear
topic perception
Dickinson
hearing
sound
poetics
experience
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/12024
work_keys_str_mv AT jeffereysimons dickinsonsear