Recuperable Traditions, Contemporary Voices

The American poet Adrienne Rich writes in 'In the Evening' that 'The old masters, the old sources, / haven't a clue what we're about' (Rich 1993: 287). Rich's poem dates from the mid-1960s and slightly predates the now well-established feminist project of recoverin...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Ekphrastic Encounter in Contemporary British Poetry and Elsewhere pp. 103 - 119
Main Author Kennedy, David
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Routledge 2012
Edition1
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISBN9781138118331
9781409418801
1409418804
1138118338
DOI10.4324/9781315615950-10

Cover

Abstract The American poet Adrienne Rich writes in 'In the Evening' that 'The old masters, the old sources, / haven't a clue what we're about' (Rich 1993: 287). Rich's poem dates from the mid-1960s and slightly predates the now well-established feminist project of recovering artistic and literary foremothers. This chapter begins by looking at some examples of ekphrastic poetry by earlier women poets and argues that such poetry as there is amounts to a recuperable tradition. A very interesting early example is Anne King's (1621-167?) 'Under Mr Hales Picture', not least because King had also made the picture she writes about, a black and white portrait drawing now lost. King's poem begins by registering the moment of its subject's death 'Even in that instant, when they had design'd / Tokeipe thee, by thy picture still in mind'. The poem has to do instead: 'the lines were figur'd by a woman's hand / Who had noe copy to be guided by / ButHales imprinted on her memory' (In Greer et al. 1988: 181). 'Noe copy' perhaps alludes to the female artist working outside established traditions of art or, at least, not basing her portrait on a preexistent model. There is no sense of separation between writer and subject here but, in contrast, a strong sense of intersubjectivity. King the artist and writer is formed by the internalized presence of her subject. Indeed, drawing on Ettinger, we can recreate an exemplary matrixial scene in which King looks at her own artistic creation and writes in response to it. Her gaze, which created the portrait drawing, now looks back at her. Her poem, then, registers the experience of recognizing oneself as part-object and partial subject. And this makes King's poem an example of the complex, many-layered ekphrastic encounter I argued for in Chapter 1.
AbstractList The American poet Adrienne Rich writes in 'In the Evening' that 'The old masters, the old sources, / haven't a clue what we're about' (Rich 1993: 287). Rich's poem dates from the mid-1960s and slightly predates the now well-established feminist project of recovering artistic and literary foremothers. This chapter begins by looking at some examples of ekphrastic poetry by earlier women poets and argues that such poetry as there is amounts to a recuperable tradition. A very interesting early example is Anne King's (1621-167?) 'Under Mr Hales Picture', not least because King had also made the picture she writes about, a black and white portrait drawing now lost. King's poem begins by registering the moment of its subject's death 'Even in that instant, when they had design'd / Tokeipe thee, by thy picture still in mind'. The poem has to do instead: 'the lines were figur'd by a woman's hand / Who had noe copy to be guided by / ButHales imprinted on her memory' (In Greer et al. 1988: 181). 'Noe copy' perhaps alludes to the female artist working outside established traditions of art or, at least, not basing her portrait on a preexistent model. There is no sense of separation between writer and subject here but, in contrast, a strong sense of intersubjectivity. King the artist and writer is formed by the internalized presence of her subject. Indeed, drawing on Ettinger, we can recreate an exemplary matrixial scene in which King looks at her own artistic creation and writes in response to it. Her gaze, which created the portrait drawing, now looks back at her. Her poem, then, registers the experience of recognizing oneself as part-object and partial subject. And this makes King's poem an example of the complex, many-layered ekphrastic encounter I argued for in Chapter 1.
Author Kennedy, David
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: David
  surname: Kennedy
  fullname: Kennedy, David
BookMark eNpVkEFLAzEUhCMqqHXvHnvX1SRvk2yOsqgVCoJUr8vLbh4Et5uSrEr_vS310sMwzHcYmLliZ2McPWM3gt9XIKsHa2oBQmmhrOKl4CesOEKnhyxgpxpAXLAi5-C4MgoqMPaS3b777nvjE7rBz1cJ-zCFOOa7eRPHya83MWHazj9j6Hy-ZueEQ_bFv8_Yx_PTqlmUy7eX1-ZxWQah-FRKQs_JdRYQKiLrSPZaKaMNGdkZIIM1d8QlCi105cBay_veSak1ekKYscWhN4wU0xp_Yxr6dsLtEBMlHLuQXYxfuRW83d_QHm3e0x-f8m6GhD8ZRVUm
ContentType Book Chapter
Copyright Copyright © David Kennedy 2012
Copyright_xml – notice: Copyright © David Kennedy 2012
DOI 10.4324/9781315615950-10
DatabaseTitleList
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Languages & Literatures
DocumentTitleAlternate Recuperable Traditions, Contemporary Voices
EISBN 9781315615950
9781317034476
1317034481
1315615959
9781317034483
1317034473
Edition 1
EndPage 119
ExternalDocumentID 10_4324_9781315615950_10_version2
GroupedDBID -VX
089
20A
38.
A4J
AABBV
ABARN
ABEQL
ABMRC
ABQPQ
ACLGV
ADTEY
ADVEM
AERYV
AEUHU
AFXGA
AGWCO
AHWGJ
AIXPE
AIXXW
AJFER
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
AMYDA
AZZ
BBABE
BC-
CQYVH
CZZ
DUGUG
EBATF
EBSCA
ECOWB
EKLKH
GQITE
HF4
INALI
JJU
JTX
MYL
PQQKQ
SU4
XI1
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-i150t-2fae0fbc93a34ff9bf2d655767f72c73f7a80bf02a16164b39990ddb2266aefa3
ISBN 9781138118331
9781409418801
1409418804
1138118338
IngestDate Fri Mar 28 04:26:51 EDT 2025
IsPeerReviewed false
IsScholarly false
Keywords Du Ry
Human Suffering
Vice Versa
Ekphrastic Poetry
Niki De Saint Phalle
White Universes
Ekphrastic Encounter
Literary Foremothers
Ekphrastic Writing
Common Language
Basso Relievo
Kahlo's Art
Kahlo's Paintings
Elizabeth Teft
Ashbery's Poem
Bas Relief
Ettinger's Theorizing
Hemans's Poem
Ekphrastic Poems
Grecian Urn
Parmigianino's Self-portrait
Ekphrastic Practice
Contemporary British Poetry
Matrixial Gaze
Earlier Women Poets
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-i150t-2fae0fbc93a34ff9bf2d655767f72c73f7a80bf02a16164b39990ddb2266aefa3
PageCount 17
ParticipantIDs informaworld_taylorfrancisbooks_10_4324_9781315615950_10_version2
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 2012
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2012-01-01
PublicationDate_xml – year: 2012
  text: 2012
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationTitle The Ekphrastic Encounter in Contemporary British Poetry and Elsewhere
PublicationYear 2012
Publisher Routledge
Publisher_xml – name: Routledge
SSID ssib057534379
ssib047197199
ssj0000622809
Score 1.3883275
Snippet The American poet Adrienne Rich writes in 'In the Evening' that 'The old masters, the old sources, / haven't a clue what we're about' (Rich 1993: 287). Rich's...
SourceID informaworld
SourceType Publisher
StartPage 103
Title Recuperable Traditions, Contemporary Voices
URI https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781315615950/chapters/10.4324/9781315615950-10
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwrV1da9swFBVr9jL60nZdP7YWP4y-tG5lS_56LCUjlHbsISl5C5ItQSkkJXE36K_vkeTYSlYoHYMggmzsiGPfe-7NvUeEfIfXhpPWJlFVagy8DPO0jEMRJRUt01gx2_V--zMdjPj1OBl3--XZ7pJanpfPr_aV_AuqmAOupkv2Hci2F8UEvgNfjEAY4xr5XU2ztgD3H4CFMFLLp_2p3fZBzZs-vk5zaqlb9Gum6rmTWzJ9Jn-AlnrF3v5V5Q5m-fSo5rbHCq6tckVeNsPq3-ZuZmyOn0Ww5Rh-FmG1_GgZXhoxLG4E2yLPxEWUed4ycgZv3RAbnT9XexExRIjgTAkNm_rVVXlrBCHm5MnKqRPM_nb5QrjXjSznPfIRfrrfZmLgUwt8WioG1smMtGKbX6OpEfop7OZQYCWwXCy3jX3Nknij97U8GHX6X27J7j9t89su1pexJmvrEZLhFtk0TSqB6R7BMrfJBzXdIXs3TfJ5EZwEN61e9uIzOfUwDDoMzwIfwcAhuEtGP_rDq0HYbJMR3oPN12GshaJalgUTjGtdSB1XaYI4MtNZXGZMZyKnUtNYgN2nXIKSFrSqJIh3KpQW7AvpTWdTtU8CnSelRlDAcyp4lURSKylEJlMdSZXF8QG59Bc-qW1WSbstYMybsJi8iefhf7jGV_Kpe4i_kV49f1JHIIe1PG6ekxceIlnK
linkProvider ProQuest Ebooks
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&rft.genre=bookitem&rft.title=The+Ekphrastic+Encounter+in+Contemporary+British+Poetry+and+Elsewhere&rft.au=Kennedy%2C+David&rft.atitle=Recuperable+Traditions%2C+Contemporary+Voices&rft.date=2012-01-01&rft.pub=Routledge&rft.isbn=9781409418801&rft.spage=103&rft.epage=119&rft_id=info:doi/10.4324%2F9781315615950-10&rft.externalDocID=10_4324_9781315615950_10_version2
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=9781138118331/lc.gif&client=summon&freeimage=true
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=9781138118331/mc.gif&client=summon&freeimage=true
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=9781138118331/sc.gif&client=summon&freeimage=true