TY - BOOK AU - Diehl,Joanne Feit TI - Elizabeth Bishop and Marianne Moore: The Psychodynamics of Creativity SN - 9780691069753 AV - PS3503.I78 U1 - 810.9 PY - 1993///] CY - Princeton, NJ : PB - Princeton University Press, KW - American poetry KW - Women authors KW - History and criticism KW - Authorship KW - Sex differences KW - History KW - 20th century KW - Creative ability KW - Feminism and literature KW - United States KW - Feminist poetry, American KW - Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) KW - Modernism (Literature) KW - Poetry KW - Psychological aspects KW - Poets, American KW - Psychology KW - Psychoanalysis and literature KW - Women and literature KW - Women poets, American KW - LITERARY CRITICISM / Poetry KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Acknowledgments --; INTRODUCTION: The Muse's Monogram --; CHAPTER ONE. "Efforts of Affection": Toward a Theory of Female Poetic Influence --; CHAPTER TWO. Reading Bishop Reading Moore --; CHAPTER THREE. The Memory of Desire and the Landscape of Form: Reading Bishop through Object-Relations Theory --; CONCLUSION: Object Relations, Influence, and the Woman Poet --; Notes --; Index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - This highly innovative work on poetic influence among women writers focuses on the relationship between modernist poet Elizabeth Bishop and her mentor Marianne Moore. Departing from Freudian models of influence theory that ignore the question of maternal presence, Joanne Diehl applies the psychoanalytic insights of object relations theorists Melanie Klein and Christopher Bollas to woman-to-woman literary transactions. She lays the groundwork for a far-reaching critical approach as she shows that Bishop, mourning her separation from her natural mother, strives to balance gratitude toward Moore, her literary mother, with a potentially disabling envy.Diehl begins by exploring Bishop's memoir of Moore, "Efforts of Affection," as an attempt by Bishop to verify Moore's uniqueness in order to defend herself against her predecessor's almost overwhelming originality. She then offers an intertextual reading of the two writers' works that inquires into Bishop's ambivalence toward Moore. In an analysis of "Crusoe in England" and "In the Village," Diehl exposes the restorative impulses that fuel aesthetic creation and investigates how Bishop thematizes an understanding of literary production as a process of psychic compensation UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9781400820863 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9781400820863 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/cover/covers/9781400820863.jpg ER -