Description

Book Synopsis

Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and Writing Between Them: Turning the Table examines early draft manuscripts and published poems by Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath in order to uncover the compositional approaches that they held in common. Both poets not only honed the minutiae of individual poems but also reworked the shape of overall sequences in order to cultivate unique theories of an ars poetica. The book incorporates drafts of their work from Indiana University’s Lilly Library, Emory University’s Manuscripts, Archives, and Rare Books Library, Smith College’s Mortimer Rare Book Room, and the British Library. After assessing the writing and revision strategies that the poets’ early drafts reveal, the book investigates the material that they borrowed from one another and then reimagined through two major sequences: Plath’s Ariel and Hughes’s Crow. The book enhances its analysis of the poets’ shared techniques by discussing several pairs of poems from Ariel and Hughes’s Birthday Letters that respond to one another. Its final chapter also includes an evaluation of some of Hughes’s unpublished journal entries and unpublished letters that comment on his last collection’s public reception. In the conclusion, the author chronicles Hughes’s and Plath’s own remarks on their writing process as further evidence of their ars poetica.



Trade Review

Significantly contributing to the literary-critical and archival-based scholarship in both Plath studies and Hughes studies, Jennifer Ryan-Bryant’s Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and the Writing Between Them: Turning the Table focuses our attention in compelling fashion on Hughes’s and Plath’s poetry and attendant poetics, histories, and contexts, while offering new readings of poems spanning the poets’ careers in the process. This book will be of great interest to readers and scholars who want to know more about how various poetry collections by Plath and Hughes came into being and how we can conceptualize Plath’s and Hughes’s ars poeticas within the contexts of their own and each other’s bodies of work.

-- Julie Goodspeed-Chadwick, Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus

Table of Contents

Dedication

Epigraphs

Table of Contents

Abbreviations

Acknowledgments

Introduction— The Materials of Poetics

Chapter One— Revision and Transformation in Hughes’s Early Work

Chapter Two— Figures and Flowers: Plath’s Approaches to Draft and Revision

Chapter Three— Silent Partners: Ariel and Crow

Chapter Four— “This is the last”: Words Between Them

Conclusion— Writing Across Two Lifetimes

Bibliography

About the Author

Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and Writing Between

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    A Hardback by Jennifer D. Ryan-Bryant

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 07/02/2022
      ISBN13: 9781793614155, 978-1793614155
      ISBN10: 1793614156

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and Writing Between Them: Turning the Table examines early draft manuscripts and published poems by Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath in order to uncover the compositional approaches that they held in common. Both poets not only honed the minutiae of individual poems but also reworked the shape of overall sequences in order to cultivate unique theories of an ars poetica. The book incorporates drafts of their work from Indiana University’s Lilly Library, Emory University’s Manuscripts, Archives, and Rare Books Library, Smith College’s Mortimer Rare Book Room, and the British Library. After assessing the writing and revision strategies that the poets’ early drafts reveal, the book investigates the material that they borrowed from one another and then reimagined through two major sequences: Plath’s Ariel and Hughes’s Crow. The book enhances its analysis of the poets’ shared techniques by discussing several pairs of poems from Ariel and Hughes’s Birthday Letters that respond to one another. Its final chapter also includes an evaluation of some of Hughes’s unpublished journal entries and unpublished letters that comment on his last collection’s public reception. In the conclusion, the author chronicles Hughes’s and Plath’s own remarks on their writing process as further evidence of their ars poetica.



      Trade Review

      Significantly contributing to the literary-critical and archival-based scholarship in both Plath studies and Hughes studies, Jennifer Ryan-Bryant’s Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and the Writing Between Them: Turning the Table focuses our attention in compelling fashion on Hughes’s and Plath’s poetry and attendant poetics, histories, and contexts, while offering new readings of poems spanning the poets’ careers in the process. This book will be of great interest to readers and scholars who want to know more about how various poetry collections by Plath and Hughes came into being and how we can conceptualize Plath’s and Hughes’s ars poeticas within the contexts of their own and each other’s bodies of work.

      -- Julie Goodspeed-Chadwick, Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus

      Table of Contents

      Dedication

      Epigraphs

      Table of Contents

      Abbreviations

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction— The Materials of Poetics

      Chapter One— Revision and Transformation in Hughes’s Early Work

      Chapter Two— Figures and Flowers: Plath’s Approaches to Draft and Revision

      Chapter Three— Silent Partners: Ariel and Crow

      Chapter Four— “This is the last”: Words Between Them

      Conclusion— Writing Across Two Lifetimes

      Bibliography

      About the Author

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