Sunday, June 2, 2019
Examination of Womens Friendships through an Analysis of Katherine Phi
interrogative sentence of Womens Friendships through an Analysis of Katherine Philips Friendships Mystery To My Dearest Lucasia When readers reflect on the verse line of the seventeenth century, poets such as John Donne and the Metaphysicals, Jonson and the Cavaliers, and John Milton often come to mind. The poetry crosses over various boundaries of Neoplatonic, Ovidian, and Petrarchan forms, for example, often with many references to women filling the lines. Described as baffled creatures, seventeenth century women were often shut out from all possibilities of power, and they were reason into four categories virgins, women to be married, married, and widowed. In the state of marriage, women were forced to be the submissive, powerless objects of their husbands. equality and balance within their marriages were of no concern to men of the seventeenth century. go forth of the oppressive setting of the seventeenth century arose very few women poets however, Katherine Philips not pr ecisely became a poet, but she also displayed her will to survive by responding to the negativity that surrounded the lives of females, especially the oppression of women in marriages. By focusing on the brilliance of friendships between women Philips used her poetry, specifically Friendships Mystery To My Dearest Lucasia, as an effect to critique the misogyny and misrepresentations of marriages put forth by male poets, such as John Donne, and the oppressive social settings of the seventeenth century. In order to give out understand Philips critique of Donne within the lines of her poetry, a reading of twentieth century dilettante Adrienne Richs essay When We Dead Awaken Writing for Re-Vision ... ...Company, 2000. Donne, John. The Canonization. Abrams 1240-1241. Donne, John. The Relic. Abrams 1253-1254. Donne, John. The Sun Rising. Abrams 1239. Hageman, Elizabeth H. The Matchless Orinda Katherine Philips. Women Writers of the conversion Reformation. Georgia, 1987. Mendelson, Sara and Patricia Crawford. Women in Early Modern England 1550-1720. New York Oxford University Press, 1998. Philips, Katherine. Friendships Mystery To My Dearest Lucasia. Souers, Philips Webster. The Matchless Orinda. capital of the United Kingdom Oxford University Press, 1931. Rich, Adrienne. When We Dead Awaken Writing for Re-vision. On Lies, Secrets, and Silence. New York W.W. Norton and Company, 1979. 33-49. Wiesner, Merry E. Women and grammatical gender in Early Modern Europe. New York Cambridge, 1993. Norton Topics Online www. wwnorton.com/nael Examination of Womens Friendships through an Analysis of Katherine PhiExamination of Womens Friendships through an Analysis of Katherine Philips Friendships Mystery To My Dearest Lucasia When readers reflect on the poetry of the seventeenth century, poets such as John Donne and the Metaphysicals, Jonson and the Cavaliers, and John Milton often come to mind. The poetry crosses over various boundaries of Neoplatonic, Ovid ian, and Petrarchan forms, for example, often with many references to women filling the lines. Described as helpless creatures, seventeenth century women were often shut out from all possibilities of power, and they were generalized into four categories virgins, women to be married, married, and widowed. In the state of marriage, women were forced to be the submissive, powerless objects of their husbands. Equality and balance within their marriages were of no concern to men of the seventeenth century. Out of the oppressive setting of the seventeenth century arose very few women poets however, Katherine Philips not only became a poet, but she also displayed her will to survive by responding to the negativity that surrounded the lives of females, especially the oppression of women in marriages. By focusing on the importance of friendships between women Philips used her poetry, specifically Friendships Mystery To My Dearest Lucasia, as an outlet to critique the misogyny and misrepresen tations of marriages put forth by male poets, such as John Donne, and the oppressive social settings of the seventeenth century. In order to better understand Philips critique of Donne within the lines of her poetry, a reading of twentieth century critic Adrienne Richs essay When We Dead Awaken Writing for Re-Vision ... ...Company, 2000. Donne, John. The Canonization. Abrams 1240-1241. Donne, John. The Relic. Abrams 1253-1254. Donne, John. The Sun Rising. Abrams 1239. Hageman, Elizabeth H. The Matchless Orinda Katherine Philips. Women Writers of the Renaissance Reformation. Georgia, 1987. Mendelson, Sara and Patricia Crawford. Women in Early Modern England 1550-1720. New York Oxford University Press, 1998. Philips, Katherine. Friendships Mystery To My Dearest Lucasia. Souers, Philips Webster. The Matchless Orinda. London Oxford University Press, 1931. Rich, Adrienne. When We Dead Awaken Writing for Re-vision. On Lies, Secrets, and Silence. New York W.W. Norton and Company, 1979. 3 3-49. Wiesner, Merry E. Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe. New York Cambridge, 1993. Norton Topics Online www. wwnorton.com/nael
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