The Lonely Woman in Tennyson’s Poetry: A Case Study in “Mariana” and “Mariana in the South”

المؤلفون

  • Basil Qahtan Muhammad Department of English, College of Education, Tishk International University,Erbil, Kurdistan Region –Iraq .
  • Ziyad Muhammad HamadAmeen Department of English, College of Education, Tishk International University,Erbil, Kurdistan Region –Iraq .

الكلمات المفتاحية:

Tennyson; “Mariana”; “Mariana in the South”; lonely women.

الملخص

This paper tackles the theme of lonely women in Tennyson’s poetry. It studies the theme through the character of Mariana in the two poems carrying this name in the title, “Mariana” and “Mariana in the South”, with the objectives of finding similarities and differences and the continuity between the two poems. It studies each poem individually with focus on the characteristics of the protagonist, the setting, the correlation between the character’s psychology and the surroundings, and the presence of death and faith in each of the two poems. It ends with the conclusion that both Marianas are very similar in their situation and their suffering. Yet, the drastic change of setting in the later-written “Mariana in the South” from the setting of the earlier “Mariana” shows that, even in very different settings and with very different religious stands, women who suffer from loneliness and desertion end up similarly desperate.

المراجع

Baumann, A.E.M. 2014, September 12."Mariana" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Poetry Daily Critique. Retrieved from: http://poetrydailycritique.blogspot.com/2014/09/mariana-by-alfred-lord-tennyson.html

Braganza, V. M. 2014. The Search for Utopia: Charles Dickens' Hard Times and Alfred Tennyson's “Mariana”. Inquiries Journal/Student Pulse [Online], 6(10). Retrieved from: http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/926/the-search-for-utopia-charles-dickens-hard-times-and-alfred-tennysons-mariana

Christ, C., 1977. Victorian Masculinity and the Angel in the House. A Widening Sphere: Changing Roles of Victorian Women, 146, p. 62.

Hirabayashi, M., 1991. Women and Seclusion in Tennyson's Poetry. pp. 135-148. Retrieved from http://www.aska-r.repo.nii.ac.jp

Hunt, S. 2000. Wandering Lonely: Women’s Access to the English Romantic Countryside. In: Tallmadge, J. and Harrington, H., eds. 2000. Reading Under the Sign of Nature: New Essays in Ecocriticism. Salt Lake City, Utah: University of Utah Press, pp. 51-63. Retrieved from: https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/1349587.pdf

Osińska, D., 2019. "Then Thickest Dark Did Trance the Sky”: A Representation of Psychological Decay in Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s “Mariana. New Horizons in English Studies, 4(1), pp.74-89.

Peterson, L.H., 2009. Tennyson and the Ladies. Victorian Poetry, 47(1), pp.25-43.

Ricks, C. 1972. Poems 1832. In Tennyson (pp. 75-98). Palgrave, London.
Stevenson, L., 1948. The" High-Born Maiden" Symbol in Tennyson. Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 63(1), pp.234-243.
Tennyson, A. and Tennyson, A. T. B., 2014. Tennyson: A Selected Edition. Pearson Education. Christopher Ricks. Routledge; Taylor and Francis Group, London and New York.

التنزيلات

منشور

2020-04-20

كيفية الاقتباس

Muhammad, B. Q., & HamadAmeen, Z. M. (2020). The Lonely Woman in Tennyson’s Poetry: A Case Study in “Mariana” and “Mariana in the South”. Journal of University of Raparin, 7(2), 494–512. استرجع في من https://journal.raparinuni2024.org/index.php/JUR/article/view/paper%2021

إصدار

القسم

Humanities & Social Sciences