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루실 클리프턴의 아브젝트 시학

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dc.contributor.author변세희-
dc.date.accessioned2025-09-05T01:00:09Z-
dc.date.available2025-09-05T01:00:09Z-
dc.date.issued2025-08-
dc.identifier.issn1226-9670-
dc.identifier.urihttps://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/79811-
dc.description.abstractThis study examines the representation of Black women’s bodily experiences in Lucille Clifton’s poetry through Julia Kristeva’s concepts of abjection and the abject. While previous readings highlight Clifton’s political and communal engagements, this paper focuses on the affective force of sensory discomfort—disgust, boundary confusion, and bodily horror—evoked through recurring images of the uterus, hips, menstrual blood, and childbirth. These are not just biological markers but abject signifiers that disrupt white patriarchal norms and expose their anxieties around Black female embodiment. Drawing on Kristeva’s notions of sublime alienation and the chora, the paper explores how Clifton transforms horror into poetic agency and unspeakable pain into rhythmic voice. Her poetics treat abjection as a generative threshold, resisting symbolic containment and enacting a strategic, affective resistance.-
dc.format.extent29-
dc.language한국어-
dc.language.isoKOR-
dc.publisher신영어영문학회-
dc.title루실 클리프턴의 아브젝트 시학-
dc.title.alternativeLucile Clifton's Abject Poetics.-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.publisher.location대한민국-
dc.identifier.bibliographicCitation신영어영문학, no.91, pp 209 - 237-
dc.citation.title신영어영문학-
dc.citation.number91-
dc.citation.startPage209-
dc.citation.endPage237-
dc.type.docTypeY-
dc.identifier.kciidART003236971-
dc.description.isOpenAccessN-
dc.description.journalRegisteredClasskci-
dc.subject.keywordAuthorLucille Clifton-
dc.subject.keywordAuthorBlack female body-
dc.subject.keywordAuthorAbject-
dc.subject.keywordAuthorAbjection-
dc.subject.keywordAuthorChora-
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