爱尔兰女性诗歌史

IF 0.3 2区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Irish studies review Pub Date : 2023-04-02 DOI:10.1080/09670882.2023.2195588
Rosanne Gallenne
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摘要

《爱尔兰女性诗歌史》是一本雄心勃勃的文集,重新评估和重新定位从中世纪到当代爱尔兰女性所写的诗歌。尽管涵盖了广泛的领域,编辑们从一开始就强调了他们的卷的“不完整”(8),这突出了贡献者的工作对这些女诗人声音的可持续恢复的重要性。由两个互补的介绍和二十四个章节组成,该卷说明了这些女诗人与她们时代的关注,以及她们用来解决广泛主题的多种方法和技术的参与。按时间顺序组织,这本合集给人一种叙事的感觉,一种不同时代的女诗人之间网络和联系的连续性,并提出了一个坚实的案例,即事实上有祖先,尽管伊凡·博兰现在的说法非常微妙。《爱尔兰女性诗歌史》以编辑的总体介绍开篇,其中艾比·达西和大卫·惠特利揭示了她们的历史和理论框架。编辑们诚实地承认,尽管这里的材料很广泛,但差距仍然存在,他们欢迎强调他们的卷的合作性质,为未来的研究奠定了坚实的基础,并为安妮·福格蒂的第二次介绍打开了大门。福格蒂对爱尔兰女性诗歌进行了广泛的研究,探讨了爱尔兰女性诗人的出版和接受历史。福格蒂指出,作为一名女性诗人往往是一种“残疾标准”(26),他评估了(主要是男性)诗歌选集学家一再排除许多女性声音的责任。在这个非常全面的介绍中提出的证据有力地论证了“赋予各种爱尔兰女诗人一个非评判空间的多元主义视野”(33),这正是本书所立足的地方。
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A history of Irish women’s poetry
A History of Irish Women’s Poetry is an ambitious collection of essays that re-evaluate and recontextualise poetry written by women in Ireland, from Medieval times to the contemporary. Though covering extensive grounds, the editors emphasise from the beginning the “incom-pleteness” (8) of their volume, which highlights the importance of the contributors’ work for a sustainable recovery of these women poets’ voices. Composed of two complementary introductions and twenty-four chapters, the volume illustrates these women poets’ engagement with the concerns of their times, but also the multiple approaches and techniques they used to address a broad range of topics. Chronologically organised, the collection gives the sense of a narrative, a continuity of networks and connections between women poets from different generations, and makes a solid case that there were, in fact, foremothers, despite Eavan Boland’s now much nuanced statement. A History of Irish Women’s Poetry opens with the editors’ general introduction where Ailbhe Darcy and David Wheatley expose their framework, both historical and theoretical. The editors’ honest acknowledgement that despite the breadth of material present here gaps are still left, and their welcome emphasis on the collaborative nature of their volume establish solid foundations for future research, and opens the ground to Anne Fogarty’s second introduction. Having worked extensively on Irish women’s poetry, Fogarty explores the history of publication and reception of Irish women poets. Pointing out that being a woman poet has often been a “disabling criterion” (26), Fogarty assesses the responsibility of (mostly male) poetry anthol-ogists who repeatedly excluded many female voices. The evidence brought forth in this very comprehensive introduction powerfully argue for a “pluralist vision that accords a non-judgemental space to a variety of Irish women poets” (33), which is exactly where this volume anchors itself.
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