| Article Title |
Emily Dickinson and the Poetics of Nature: A Proto–Eco-feminist Perspective |
| Author(s) | Salma Begum. |
| Country | India |
| Abstract |
This paper looks closely at some of Emily Dickinson’s poems through the lens of eco criticism. It traces how her verses touch on nature, people, and their place within the living world around them. Though known for quiet reflections on inner life, she also dwells deeply on green things, seasons turning, soil breathing—moments that invite environmental readings. By studying meadows, birds, trees, and skies in her lines, the analysis uncovers blurred edges between person and landscape. Her words quietly pull apart old ideas about humans standing above the rest of creation. What emerges is not loud protest but soft insistence—a different kind of closeness with earth, one built on awareness, balance, and respect. Out in her verses, Emily blurs where self stops and world begins—life links tightly, not just near but far. Power lives within woods, streams, and stones; they respond, feel, and act. One idea pulls another: dominance fades when seeing beings as kin. Ethics shift once nature speaks back. Thought grows rooted in soil, shaped by weather and moved by seasons. What we see in her work are careful observations of nature, driven by wonder mixed with deeper questions about existence—blurring lines long held apart: body and spirit, growth and ending, earth and idea. Her verses track slow falls and quiet returns, hinting at cycles now central to today’s views on balance in nature. One might say she fits alongside green thinkers, though rooted in one small town where daily walks fed a sharp attention to soil, light, and seasonal shifts. When ethics meet reverence in these writings, something clear emerges—not prophecy, but poetry that quietly shapes later voices in ecology and feminist reflection. A fresh look at Dickinson casts her not just as someone who wrote about inner life and dying but as someone who saw further. She draws people into noticing more carefully—slowing down, showing respect, and staying small in thought. This grounds her place in current writings on ecology without force or flourish. Keywords: ecocritical analysis, human-nature relationship, ecological sensibility, literary representation. |
| Area | English |
| Issue | Volume 3, Issue 6 (June 2026) |
| Published | 2026/06/06 |
| How to Cite | Begum, S. (2026). Emily Dickinson and the Poetics of Nature: A Proto–Eco-feminist Perspective. ShodhPatra: International Journal of Science and Humanities, 3(6), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.70558/SPIJSH.2026.v3.i6.45771 |
| DOI | 10.70558/SPIJSH.2026.v3.i6.45771 |
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