Emily Dickinson : a biography -- Emily Dickinson : the woman and the poet: Dickinson constructed her own elusive image / by Joyce Carol Oates. A difficult poet to know / by Helen McNeil. Dickinson's need for seclusion / by Adrienne Rich. Dickinson was misunderstood by those closest to her / by Amy Lowell. Why Emily Dickinson wore white / by Kathryn Whitford. Dickinson found significance in minor events / by Ella Gilbert Ives. Emily Dickinson's Puritan heritage / by John Robinson. Emily Dickinson ranks among world's greatest poets / by Allen Tate -- Poetic analysis: Two explications / by Nancy Lenz Harvey and Thomas H. Johnson. Diverging vciewpoints on a classic poem / by Gerhard Friedrich, John Ciardi, and Caroline Hogue. An explication of "The first day's night had come" / by Constance Rooke. Editorial decisions affect Dickinson collections / by Marta L. Werner -- Dickinson's poetic themes: Dickinson's poems lack essential elements / by R.P. Blackmur. Emily Dickinson's vision of "circumference" / by Jane Langton. Dickinson acquired a unique understanding of faith / by Richard Wilbur. Emily Dickinson's feminist humor / by Suzanne Juhasz, Christanne Miller, and Martha Nell Smith. Naming as a strategy in Dickinson's poems / by Sharon Cameron. Dickinson's tone of voice lends credibility to difficult subjects / by Archibald MacLeish. Play as a theme in Dickinson's poems / by Anand Rao Thota. Dickinson's style broke with convention / by Cheryl Walker.
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