Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Wires, mirrors, tricks of the light: Zoë Skoulding and lyric poetry

Rogers, Samuel

Wires, mirrors, tricks of the light: Zoë Skoulding and lyric poetry Thumbnail


Authors

Sam Rogers Samuel.Rogers@uwe.ac.uk
Associate Director Literature, Linguistics & Creative Professional Writing



Contributors

Samuel Rogers
Editor

Abstract

In this discussion, the earlier poetry of Zoë Skoulding is analyzed as a case study for an expanded sense of the contemporary lyric genre. Through a fixation on visual apparatuses including eyes, lenses, binoculars, and mirrors, Skoulding’s The Mirror Trade (2004), and her collaborative work with Ian Davidson, interrogates the subject–object binary, cutting across conventional assumptions of lyric poetry. Expanding on Jonathan Culler’s recent work on the lyric, I evaluate and apply Käte Hamburger’s Hegelian theory of the lyric ‘I’ as a statement-subject, which offers a useful way of including experimental poetries as a vital part of the lyric tradition. Through analysing Skoulding and drawing parallels with James Elkins’s theories of vision, I suggest this approach risks overlooking contemporary poetry’s complexities. Ultimately, I argue that the lyric must be viewed as a spectrum of possible formulations of the self, including the outmoded Romantic model alongside more radical possibilities.

Citation

Rogers, S. (2021). Wires, mirrors, tricks of the light: Zoë Skoulding and lyric poetry. In S. Rogers (Ed.), Contemporary British and Irish Poetry (265-286). Modern Humanities Research Association. https://doi.org/10.5699/yearenglstud.51.2021.0265

Acceptance Date Aug 2, 2021
Online Publication Date Nov 16, 2021
Publication Date Nov 16, 2021
Deposit Date Aug 24, 2021
Publicly Available Date Nov 17, 2022
Pages 265-286
Series Title Yearbook of English Studies
Series Number 51
Series ISSN 0306-2473
Book Title Contemporary British and Irish Poetry
DOI https://doi.org/10.5699/yearenglstud.51.2021.0265
Keywords Poetry, Lyric, Subject-Object, English Literature, Literary Theory, Vision, Perception
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/7676451
Publisher URL http://www.mhra.org.uk/publications/Contemporary-British-Irish-Poetry

Files








You might also like



Downloadable Citations