Possibility Of An Unlimited Plurality example essay topic
There are also animal fables, parables of female power and powerlessness, a poem of insults ("a cunt a bitch a slut a slit a hole a whore a hole"), a birth poem, a funeral song, a plainsong invoking the bonding of older and younger women ("are you not shamed to treat me meanly / when you discover you become me"), and a boasting rune which has become canonical in lesbian poetry: I am the wall at the lip of the water I am the rock that refused to be battered I am the dyke i the matter, the other I am the wall with the womanly swagger And I have been many a wicked grandmother and I shall be many a wicked daughter. With Grahn's "She Who" we arrive at the two final consequences of the imperative of intimacy in women's poetry: the self that is not merely a resolved pair of polarities but an un circumscribed set of coexistent possibilities, and the poem that resists the closure of artifact to become a communal transaction. For as polarity yields to androgyny in women's poetic desires, so-the logical next step-androgyny yields to plurality. At the close of "Diving into the Wreck", Adrienne Rich learns not only "I am she: I am he" but "We are, I am, you are... the one who find our way / back to this scene". The speaker-protagonist of Levertov's "Knowing the Unknown" is "we... anyone, all of us".
When Piercy's "The Queen of Pentacles" sees that other women enable her to touch "pruned selves, smothered wishes, small wet cries... and think how all together we make up one good strong woman", her "we" signifies both multiple interior selves and herself joined to other women. As the female self recognizes its multiplicity, it sometimes moves into extended chant like forms which structurally exemplify the possibility of an unlimited plurality while tonally and rhythmically suggesting a sacred and communal primitivism. Some of our most striking contemporary poems, composed for oral performance, are incantatory. From Stealing the Language: The Emergence of Women's Poetry in America. Copyright 1986 by Alicia Su skin Ostriker.