Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly

In Morning in the Burned House (1995), Margaret Atwood includes a sequence of elegiac poems mourning the process of her father’s illness and death. Her subsequent collection, The Door (2007), while not explicitly elegiac, explores topics such as memory, aging, death, loss, and decay. These subjects...

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Main Author: Pilar Sánchez-Calle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2025-01-01
Series:Canada and Beyond
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Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/dos/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/31515
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author Pilar Sánchez-Calle
author_facet Pilar Sánchez-Calle
author_sort Pilar Sánchez-Calle
collection DOAJ
description In Morning in the Burned House (1995), Margaret Atwood includes a sequence of elegiac poems mourning the process of her father’s illness and death. Her subsequent collection, The Door (2007), while not explicitly elegiac, explores topics such as memory, aging, death, loss, and decay. These subjects are often central to both traditional and contemporary elegies. Other poems in this volume deal with writing and poetry, examining their capacity to offer consolation in the face of death, a key aspect of elegy. Drawing on critical studies of elegy in contemporary English-language poetry and on the role of elegy in Atwood’s poetry, this essay analyses the elegiac dimension of Dearly (2020), Atwood’s most recent poetry collection. Many of these poems are dedicated to her partner Graeme Gibson, who was diagnosed with vascular dementia in 2017 and passed away in 2019. Through close readings and formal analysis, I aim to demonstrate how these elegiac poems articulate a psychic landscape of mourning where separation after death is rejected and an alternative space for reunion with the deceased is created. Atwood moves beyond simple lamentation, exploring the liminal space between life and death, presence and absence.
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spelling doaj-art-01482df5c79242168aa27e093849c2f92025-02-07T08:51:16ZengEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaCanada and Beyond2254-11792025-01-011410512510.14201/candb.v14i105-12536984Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s DearlyPilar Sánchez-Calle0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4566-5300Universidad de JaénIn Morning in the Burned House (1995), Margaret Atwood includes a sequence of elegiac poems mourning the process of her father’s illness and death. Her subsequent collection, The Door (2007), while not explicitly elegiac, explores topics such as memory, aging, death, loss, and decay. These subjects are often central to both traditional and contemporary elegies. Other poems in this volume deal with writing and poetry, examining their capacity to offer consolation in the face of death, a key aspect of elegy. Drawing on critical studies of elegy in contemporary English-language poetry and on the role of elegy in Atwood’s poetry, this essay analyses the elegiac dimension of Dearly (2020), Atwood’s most recent poetry collection. Many of these poems are dedicated to her partner Graeme Gibson, who was diagnosed with vascular dementia in 2017 and passed away in 2019. Through close readings and formal analysis, I aim to demonstrate how these elegiac poems articulate a psychic landscape of mourning where separation after death is rejected and an alternative space for reunion with the deceased is created. Atwood moves beyond simple lamentation, exploring the liminal space between life and death, presence and absence.https://revistas.usal.es/dos/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/31515margaret atwooddearlyelegypoetrymourning
spellingShingle Pilar Sánchez-Calle
Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly
Canada and Beyond
margaret atwood
dearly
elegy
poetry
mourning
title Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly
title_full Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly
title_fullStr Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly
title_full_unstemmed Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly
title_short Presence and Absence in Margaret Atwood’s Dearly
title_sort presence and absence in margaret atwood s dearly
topic margaret atwood
dearly
elegy
poetry
mourning
url https://revistas.usal.es/dos/index.php/2254-1179/article/view/31515
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