Document Type
Article
Abstract
This paper examines Emily Dickinson's aversion to heterosexual marriage and sexual initiation in her poem "My Life had stood-- a Loaded Gun". The ethics of deciphering through identifying and categorizing potentially Queer authors and texts impacts our understandings of frequently canonized authors such as Emily Dickinson. Emily Dickinson's nineteenth-century American context informed her ability to write deliberately about her experience of subversive sexual desire. Instead, Dickinson utilizes images of death, apathy, and immortality to illustrate her revulsion toward the male body and heterosexual marriage. This paper illustrates how utilizing Queer and feminist theories illuminates new and potential understandings of Emily Dickinson's body of work and biography.
Recommended Citation
Barron, Cassandra
(2025)
"Un-Silencing Dickinson: Emily Dickinson's Aversion to the Male Body and Heterosexuality in "My Life had stood–– a Loaded Gun","
Global Tides: Vol. 19, Article 1.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/globaltides/vol19/iss1/1