Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Death in American Literature (Vol. 89) - Beth Ann Bassein (essay date 1982)
Death in American Literature (Vol. 89) - Beth Ann Bassein (essay date 1982)
Beth Ann Bassein (essay date 1982)
SOURCE: “Poe's Most Poetic Subject” in Women and Death: Linkages in Western Thought and Literature, Greenwood Press, 1984, pp. 44-57.
[In the following excerpt from an essay written in 1982, Bessein suggests that Poe's concentration on dead women in his works has negatively influenced later treatments of women in American literature, as well as women's images of themselves.]
Charles Baudelaire pronounced Edgar Allan Poe's attitude toward women chivalric, and scholars have repeatedly done likewise, even within the past three decades, without finding chivalry incompatible with his proclamation that the death of a beautiful woman is the most poetic subject to be found. Even when seeing his life and works as inextricably bound together, writers generally look upon what they consider his chivalrous approach as the accepted mode for a Southern gentleman and seem to have no special misgivings about his...
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- Representative Works
- Criticism: Overviews And General Studies
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Criticism: Death In The Works Of Emily Dickinson
- Natalie Harris (essay date 1983)
- Frances Bzowski (essay date 1984)
- Michael Staub (essay date 1984)
- Katrina Bachinger (essay date 1985)
- Phillip Stambovsky (essay date 1986)
- Janet W.Buell (essay date 1989)
- Barton Levi St. Armand (essay date 1989)
- Paula Hendrickson (essay date 1991)
- Lee Winniford (essay date 1992)
- Elizabeth A. Petrino (essay date 1994)
- Criticism: Death In The Works Of Herman Melville
- Criticism: Death In The Works Of Edgar Allan Poe
- Criticism: Death In The Works Of Walt Whitman
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