{"title":"In Defense of Indulgence: Hester Pulter's Maternal Elegies","authors":"E. Kolkovich","doi":"10.1353/JEM.2020.0009","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"abstract:Hester Pulter's elegies for her twenty-year-old daughter Jane (ca. 1645) represent a mother's grief as excessive and expansive. Attention to the materiality of Pulter's manuscript reveals the importance of one of her main motifs—the circle—to her processes of grief and poetic composition. Her Jane poems expose the limitations of cultural ideas about moderate mourning and embrace a gendered style of grieving and parenting that Pulter calls \"indulgent,\" as they insist that maternal elegies can be both emotional and intellectual. Pulter's manuscript shows evidence of her own \"indulgent\" return to the subject of Jane's death and allows us to read one of her elegies in two stages of its composition. In \"Upon the Death of My Dear and Lovely Daughter, J. P.,\" a nine-line addition transforms a poem about individual loss into a royalist lament. Pulter's Jane elegies are especially salient examples of the way her poems frequently echo and expand upon one another as they play with literary allusion and demonstrate the centrality of recycling and revisiting to her authorial process.","PeriodicalId":42614,"journal":{"name":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","volume":"20 1","pages":"43 - 70"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-02-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1353/JEM.2020.0009","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/JEM.2020.0009","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"CULTURAL STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
abstract:Hester Pulter's elegies for her twenty-year-old daughter Jane (ca. 1645) represent a mother's grief as excessive and expansive. Attention to the materiality of Pulter's manuscript reveals the importance of one of her main motifs—the circle—to her processes of grief and poetic composition. Her Jane poems expose the limitations of cultural ideas about moderate mourning and embrace a gendered style of grieving and parenting that Pulter calls "indulgent," as they insist that maternal elegies can be both emotional and intellectual. Pulter's manuscript shows evidence of her own "indulgent" return to the subject of Jane's death and allows us to read one of her elegies in two stages of its composition. In "Upon the Death of My Dear and Lovely Daughter, J. P.," a nine-line addition transforms a poem about individual loss into a royalist lament. Pulter's Jane elegies are especially salient examples of the way her poems frequently echo and expand upon one another as they play with literary allusion and demonstrate the centrality of recycling and revisiting to her authorial process.
海丝特·普尔特为她二十岁的女儿简所作的哀歌(约1645年)表现了一位母亲过度而巨大的悲伤。关注普尔特手稿的物质性,揭示了她的主要主题之一——圆——对她的悲伤和诗歌创作过程的重要性。她的简诗暴露了适度哀悼的文化观念的局限性,并拥抱了一种性别化的悲伤和育儿风格,普尔特称之为“放纵”,因为她们坚持认为,母亲的挽歌既可以是情感的,也可以是智力的。普尔特的手稿显示了她自己“放纵地”回到简之死这个主题的证据,并允许我们从两个阶段来阅读她的一首挽歌。在《关于我亲爱的可爱女儿的死亡》(Upon the Death of My Dear and Lovely Daughter, J. P.)中,一首关于个人损失的诗增加了九行字,变成了保皇党的哀歌。普尔特的简哀歌是她的诗歌经常相互呼应和扩展的突出例子,因为他们玩文学典喻,并展示了循环和重新审视她的创作过程的中心地位。