Abstract
In poetry, the unsaid is vital to the production of meaning. In order to investigate the
theoretical framework of this claim and its practical application, my research comprises
a critical component, The Poetics of Reticence, and a research-led creative practice, a
collection of poems, Boat of Letters. The critical study introduces and explores the idea
I have coined 'the poetics of reticence', a new term in the field. I argue that narrative
gaps are central to the poetics of reticence. The creative practice exhibits and challenges
that poetics.
Boat of Letters collects poems that build on my instinctive understanding of
reticence and stand in relation to the theory I lay out in my critical thesis. The theory
emerged from the poems I have read. The collection includes poems that are obviously
reticent as well as those that may at first appear to be non-reticent. I intentionally
experiment with both approaches in order to test my theory that the unsaid lies at the
heart of poems.
The Introduction to The Poetics of Reticence includes a memoir of my
development as a poet in relation to reticence, defines key terms and concepts, and
provides an outline of the subsequent four chapters. The first chapter, a literature
review, 'Critical Approaches to Reticence,' offers an overview of scholarly debates on
this subject and evaluates critical texts about reticence. The second chapter 'A
Methodology of Reticence', presents my methodology, which combines both
conceptual and textual analysis. Here I apply a Levinasian theory to my argument in
order to illuminate the notion that withheld information in a poem represents the
speaker's vulnerability and otherness. This chapter includes a special section on Emily
Dickinson whose work is explored as a test case to support my theory. In the third
3
chapter, 'The Ethics of Reticence', I maintain that narrative gaps invite the reader to
accept the vulnerability and ultimate inscrutability of the poem and to turn inward and
confront and develop the self, leading to a sense of responsibility. Dickinson is
discussed here again, but this time through the lens of this chapter's concerns regarding
ethics. The fourth and final chapter, 'Writing Boat of Letters', sheds light on how the
poetics of reticence functions in contemporary poetic practice from the point of view of
a poet. I reflect on my own work in this chapter, supporting my assertions in the
previous chapters, through an analysis of my writing practice. This last chapter offers an
intimate and practice-based answer to my research question: how does reticence
produce meaning? In the Conclusion, I review my findings and discuss how my research
can extend to further investigations.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Qualification | Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) |
| Awarding Institution |
|
| Supervisors/Advisors |
|
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - Jun 2023 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Physical Location: Online onlyKeywords
- reticence
- poetry
- poetics
- trauma
- Torah
- Bible
- Midrash
- Dickinson
- American poetry
- nineteenth century poets
- narratology
- women's writing
- Emmanuel Levinas
- holocaust
- Jessica Greenbaum
- Paul Celan
- Elizabeth Bishop
- Dan Pagis
- James Merrill
- Jean Valentine
- Erich Auerbach
- Charles Reznikoff
- English language and literature
PhD type
- Standard route