Abstract

This article examines the sociopolitical vision of some of Elizabeth Bishop’s poems from an ecofeminist critical perspective. Bishop, a twentieth-century American poet, uses animals and natural elements to manifest her attachment to nature (and women by implication), thus reflecting an oppressed feminist voice through the theme of abused, weak nature. By relating Bishop’s poems to W. B. Yeats’s poem Leda and the Swan, we foreground an ecofeminist relation between the Greek myth Yeats employed and Bishop’s poems. Our contribution lies in the multilayered pattern of ecofeminist defense this article traces in poems like Giant Snail, Giant Toad, Strayed Crab, The Armadillo, Sandpiper, The Moose and Trouvée. The conclusion emphasizes the attempts Bishop shoulders through her animal poetry to renew the old man-nature relation of balance and justice and simultaneously to elevate woman/nature. Bishop's poetry, it is argued, exceeds the personal or subjective and thus contains socio-political, anti-patriarchal thrusts explored in this article through an ecofeminist lens.

Highlights

  • A twentieth-century American poet, uses animals and natural elements to manifest her attachment to nature, reflecting an oppressed feminist voice through the theme of abused, weak nature

  • Our contribution lies in the multilayered pattern of ecofeminist defense this article traces in poems like Giant Snail, Giant Toad, Strayed Crab, The Armadillo, Sandpiper, The Moose and Trouvée

  • Surveying the literature on the famous American poet, Elizabeth Bishop (1911-1979) and her poetry, many argue that her connection to natural elements makes her different from her contemporaries writing in the confessional tradition

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Summary

ARTICLE INFO

Article history Received: December 01, 2017 Accepted: January 10, 2018 Published: February 28, 2018 Volume: 9 Issue: 1 Advance access: January 2018.

INTRODUCTION
BISHOP AND YEATS
Animals as Teachers
Harmed Animals and Misused Nature
CONCLUSION
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