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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
윤희수 (부경대학교)
저널정보
새한영어영문학회 새한영어영문학 새한영어영문학 제58권 제3호
발행연도
2016.8
수록면
69 - 91 (23page)

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초록· 키워드

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This study aims to look into Li-Young Lee’s father-seeking poetics by analyzing poems in Rose and The City in Which I Love You. Focusing on how Lee recalls his father and meets with Whitman and Emerson, two literary fathers of American literature, the study will show that Lee tries to secure the foundation of his identity and then expand his poetic perspectives by communicating with them. As a source of life piercing through his body, Lee’s familial father binds the poet to the world in “Dreaming of Hair.” The poet inherits the behavior of tenderness from his father in “The Gift.” Lee’s father also gives the poet the opportunity to confront himself losing connection to his ethnic origins in “Persimmons.” In “Eating Alone,” however, Lee accepts the absence of his familial father and prepares for his poetic journey of self-reliance. In “The Cleaving,” Lee expands his identity beyond ethnic and cultural boundaries. The poet feels a sense of solidarity with a Chinese-American butcher and expands it towards the entire Chinese race. Following Whitman’s praise of the human body and love for all human beings, Lee enumerates facial and bodily features of Chinese people and feels love for them. The poet also embraces Emerson’s transcendental idea of interconnectedness in spite of his racial prejudice against Chinese people. In the end, Lee endeavors to amalgamate his ethnic heritage and American literary tradition to enlarge his poetic world.

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Ⅰ. 들어가는 말
Ⅱ. 아버지의 기억과 뿌리 찾기
Ⅲ. 문학적 대부들과의 만남
Ⅳ. 맺는 말
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UCI(KEPA) : I410-ECN-0101-2017-840-001133538