Araştırma Makalesi

Nature As a Site of Balance and A Source of Poetic Material in Joseph Skipsey’s Poems

Sayı: 17 31 Ekim 2023
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Nature As a Site of Balance and A Source of Poetic Material in Joseph Skipsey’s Poems

Abstract

Victorian poetry, which developed under the influence of profound socio-economic transformations and in company with diverse literary voices and perspectives, includes the poems of the leading figures of the period as well as those of many little-known labouring poets from various professional groups. These poets, most of whom were self-educated, forged their literary perspectives under harsh working conditions, and although they could not write poems with high aesthetic value like the others, they reflected the world they lived in with an intense sensitivity and a sincere language. One of them was the Northumbrian collier Joseph Skipsey (1832-1903), who spent most of his life in the coal mines he entered at seven. In his poems, the traces of communal practices and cultural codes of his region are clearly seen. Even if his living in the country might evoke at first glance that Skipsey is quite close to nature, his relations with it surprisingly exist in a narrowed framework and remain within the confines of traditional narrative forms such as ballad and song. This study aims to reveal the essence of a collier poet’s relationship with nature in his poems within the socio-economic conditions of Victorian England. The main argument of the study is that Skipsey uses nature not as a glorified unity of beings, but as a site of balance and a source of poetic material he refers to in narrating individual emotions, human relations and the realities of miners’ life

Keywords

Kaynakça

  1. Armstrong, I. (1996). Victorian Poetry: Poetry, Politics and Poetics. London-New York: Routledge.
  2. Bunting, B. (1976). “Preface”. B. Bunting (Ed.), Joseph Skipsey: Selected Poems. Sunderland: Ceolfrith Press, 7-14.
  3. Christ, C. T. (2002). “Introduction: Victorian Poetics”. R. Cronin, A. Chapman, A. H. Harrison (Eds.), A Companion to Victorian Poetry. Malden-Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1-22.
  4. Dent, S. P. (2000). Iniquitous Symmetries: Aestheticism and Secularism in the Reception of William Blake’s Works in Books and Periodicals during the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880. Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of Warwick, Department of English and Comparative Literature.
  5. Fish, L. M. (1974). The Folklore of the Coal Miners of the Northeast of England. Unpublished PhD Thesis, Indiana University.
  6. Gilchrist, P. (2016). “Hail, Tyneside Lads in Collier Fleets: Song Culture, Sailing and Sailors in North-East England”. B. Beaven, K. Bell, R. James (Eds.), Port Towns and Urban Cultures International Histories of the Waterfront, c. 1700—2000. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 29-48.
  7. Goodridge, J. (2005). “Some Rhetorical Strategies in Later Nineteenth-Century Laboring-Class Poetry”. Criticism, 47(4), 531-547.
  8. Grieco, P. J. (1993). Dreams Old and Nascent: Conflict, Continuity and Change in Working-Class Poetry. Unpublished PhD Thesis. Faculty of the Graduate School of State University of New York at Buffalo.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil

İngilizce

Konular

İngiliz ve İrlanda Dili, Edebiyatı ve Kültürü

Bölüm

Araştırma Makalesi

Erken Görünüm Tarihi

30 Ekim 2023

Yayımlanma Tarihi

31 Ekim 2023

Gönderilme Tarihi

9 Haziran 2023

Kabul Tarihi

1 Ağustos 2023

Yayımlandığı Sayı

Yıl 2023 Sayı: 17

Kaynak Göster

APA
Hakkıoğlu, M. (2023). Nature As a Site of Balance and A Source of Poetic Material in Joseph Skipsey’s Poems. Erzurum Teknik Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi, 17, 80-90. https://doi.org/10.29157/etusbed.1312417

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