Thursday, September 19, 2019
Marilyn Hacker Redefines Mother, Woman, and Daughter in Selected Poems
Marilyn Hacker Redefines Mother, Woman, and Daughter in Selected Poems 1965-1990      Marilyn Hacker. What does she mean? What does she mean? I check with Thrall, Hibbard, and Holman who define poetry to be "a term applied to the many forms in which man has given a rhythmic expression to his most imaginative and intense perceptions of his world, himself, and the interrelationship of the two" (364).     I forge ahead through hundreds of pages of poetry. Images and impressions are beginning to form in my mind. Finally, Hacker, you provide a clue with "Feeling and Form" where you compare your poetry to Cezanne's apples:     I do like words,  which is why I make things out of words  and listen to their hints, resounding like  skipping stones radiating circles, draw-  ing context from text, the way I've watched you draw     a pepper shaker on a table, draw  it again, once more, until it isn't like  anything but your idea of a draw-  ing, like an idea of movement, draw-  ing its shape from sequence.  (85-86)     The course syllabus indicates that "this course investigates 'mother' as a cul...                      
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