Interpreting Nightingales: Gender, Class and HistoriesBloomsbury Academic, 1997 - 299 pages The poetic nightingale is so familiar it seems hardly to merit serious attention. Yet its ubiquity is significant, suggesting associations with erotic love, pathos and art that cross culture and history. This book examines the different nightingales of European literature, starting with the Greek myth of Philomela, the raped girl, silenced by having her tongue cut out, and then transformed into the bird whose name means poet, poetry and nightingale simultaneously. Moving from the classical to the Christian worlds, Jeni Williams discusses nightingales and nature in the early church and sees the emergence of the figure as an emotive emblem of the aristocracy in mediaeval vernacular debate poetry. Her final chapters use the nightingale and the myth to examine Elizabeth Barrett Browning's struggle for an active female voice in Victorian poetry. |
From inside the book
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... expressed the conjunction of the place of art with the place of the divine , it was free to be seen as human again . Traditional folk tales of anthropomorphic animals reappear in religious literature , the first beast epic to be re ...
... expressed through the Incarnation : the spiritual within the physical , the most powerful submitting to the meekest and hum- blest . Though she does not use this terminology , Woolf is clear as to the association of the nightingale with ...
... expressed through spatial and visual imagery . Yet unfocused images can be read in contrasting ways : for the narrator ( as a chivalric subject ) , they mark the danger of similar- ity , of a lack of definition and substance ; on the ...