Lilach Lachman Tel-Aviv University

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‘Suspense is his Maturer Sister’
Time Fear and Audience in Dickinson‘s Gothic Drama
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Dickinson‘s Poem 754 can be seen as a paradigm of her self-staging, consisting as it does of a range of strategies by which she connects the imagination with fear and thereby determines a new role for the reader as spectator. In exploring the ways in which Dickinson manipulates time (with a special emphasis on suspense, curiosity, and ambiguity), I argue that she opens a new domain of experience in which the subject comtemplates her/his self entering into a relationship with otherness. This marks her innovations in relation to lyric, to Gothic and to Romantic conventions. First, Dickinson adopts the Gothic as a subtext that undermines the official affirmations of the hymn, subverts its conceptual and structural unity, and disunifies and variegates the lyric self. Second, if Gothicism projects what the dominant culture cannot incorporate within itself onto the monstrosity of the other, Dickinson locates that ‘other’ inside the self. Third, she revolutionizes the Romantic lyric by legitimizing the Gothic; in altering its stock devices by means of her temporal strategies, Dickinson allows the reader to experience the sublime in new ways.

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