Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/75496
Title: A "chosen" P[o]et among [Hu]mans: Denise Levertov's Pig Dreams Read as a Matrifocal Allegory
Authors: Rodríguez Herrera, José Manuel 
UNESCO Clasification: 6202 Teoría, análisis y crítica literarias
Keywords: Denise Levertov
Pig Dreams
Matrifocal allegory
Biography
Mythopoeia, et al
Issue Date: 2020
Journal: Tulsa Studies in Womens Literature 
Abstract: This article argues that, far from being a series of playful poems drawing from pastorals and animal fables for children, Denise Levertov's Pig Dreams (1981) can be interpreted as a matrifocal allegory. Pig Dreams follows the life of Sylvia the pig as she is adopted by humans as a pet and becomes a mother. Sylvia's life events can be read as representing the author's sense of herself as a woman poet within a masculinist poetic milieu (in images of orphanhood and alienation), her impending fear of a nuclear holocaust (Sylvia's sense of slaughter), and, finally, the need for spiritual regeneration amidst the drama and chaos of the nuclear era (Sylvia's invocations to female goddesses for protection). As Sylvia grows more mature, both physically and spiritually, she gradually transcends her confinement and moves toward new cosmologies and a more cosmic understanding of her identity. Pig Dreams signals a turning point in Levertov's career marked by a need for matrifocal spirituality and growing sense of her destiny as a woman poet.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/75496
ISSN: 0732-7730
DOI: 10.1353/tsw.2020.0002
Source: Tulsa Studies in Womens Literature [ISSN 0732-7730], v. 39 (1), p. 85-104, (Marzo 2020)
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