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Anne Bradstreet!

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Title: Anne Bradstreet!


1
Anne Bradstreet!
  • 1612 1672

2
  • Father was John Dudley, a nonconformist soldier
  • 1630, sailed with family to America
  • His coworker, Simon Bradstreet, married Anne
    when she was 16 and he was 25
  • Anne was well tutored in literature, history,
    Greek, Latin, French, Hebrew, and English.

3
  • In her memoirs, she wrote of America "I found a
    new world and new manners at which my heart rose
    up in protest.
  • Bother her father and husband were governors of
    Massachusetts, allowing her some luxury of
    lifestyle.
  • Though her men had social prominence, "any woman
    who sought to use her wit, charm, or intelligence
    in the community at large found herself
    ridiculed, banished, or executed by the Colony's
    powerful group of male leaders."

4
  • Her husband, in quest for more land and power,
    constantly moved them to the edges of the
    dangerous frontier.
  • Through this dangerous life, Anne and Simon had 8
    children, all of whom lived through childhood,
    which was rare enough in mire populous areas.
  • Anne herself was frequently ill and constantly
    expected death, but survived to be 60 years old.

5
Ann Hutchinson
  • A Friend of Ann intelligent, well educated
  • Mother of 14 children
  • Debated religious and ethical ideas with other
    women in the community
  • She believed good works not necessary to go to
    heaven
  • Banished from the colony and killed by Indians

6
  • Her later poetry was published posthumously, and
    contained a much more well-developed poetic
    voice.
  • Her Apologies, especially, dripped with sarcasm
    in her response to the male opinion of women in
    society.
  • Anne was a radically feminist poet, challenging
    the banishing of women to the private sphere of
    life and questioning the idea of an unforgiving
    Puritan God.

7
  • Because of the tendency of the Puritans to
    ostracize female intellectuals, Anne was hesitant
    to publish any of her poetry.
  • Her brother took some of her early poems to
    England (legendarily against her will) and
    published them as The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up
    in America when she was 38. It sold very well.

8
  • Anne was viewed as an intriguingly feminist
    writer, merging her sometimes overtly sexual
    imagery with the concepts of both her love for
    God and for her husband and family.
  • She examined the paradoxical reconciliation of a
    woman in the Puritanically repressive roles
    carnal love for her husband and her more stately
    and respectable relationship with God and the
    church.
  • This led to a more in-depth examination by
    feminist critics in the mid-20th century of her
    individualist take on more traditional doctrine.

9
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10
Criticism
  • Since she stuck to this traditionally accepted
    courtly style, her Tenth Muse was well-acclaimed
    among critical circles.

11
Literary Terms
  • Extended metaphors Detailed and complex
    metaphors that extend over a long section of a
    poem - Robert Frost The Road Not Taken
  • InversionIn grammar, a reversal of normal word
    order, especially the placement of a verb ahead
    of the subject (subject-verb inversion).
  • Ex In silent night when rest I took
  • "Not in the legions
  • Of horrid hell can come a devil more damned
  • In ills to top Macbeth."
  • (William Shakespeare, Macbeth)
  • "Inversion is so common in English prose that
    it may be said to be quite as much in accordance
    with the genius of the language as any other
    figure indeed, in many cases it may well be
    doubted whether there is any real inversion at
    all. Thus it may be quite as much the natural
    order to say, 'Blessed are the pure in heart,' as
    to say, 'The pure in heart are blessed.'"
  • (James De Mille, The Elements of Rhetoric,
    1878)
  • "Half an hour later came another inquiry as
    to tugs. Later came a message from the Irene,
    telling of the lifting of the fog."

12
  • Special thank you to Biography of Anne
    Bradstreet by Ann Woodlief located at
    http//www.vcu.edu/engweb/webtexts/Bradstreet/brad
    bio.htm.

13
  • Even as highly respected a man as Governor John
    Winthrop believed women could not bear
    intellectual rigor without irreparable harm.
  • Women simply did not do what Bradstreet did in
    the seveenth century unless there was something
    wrong with them

14
  • In your group read the poem Verses upon the
    Burning of our House and individually rewrite the
    versus in your own words.
  • Do the same thing for An Author to Her Book
  • http//www.vcu.edu/engweb/webtexts/Bradstreet/brad
    poems.htm
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