Adrienne rich

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    standards set, Adrienne Rich was able to exceed as not only a feminist writer but as an activist for women. In her poem Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers, and her book Snapshots of a Daughter-In-Law, Rich exposes the phases women encounter throughout their life. Subsequently, from the early influence her parents had on her, to her involvement in other areas, Rich used her voice highly and became known as one of the most provocative voices throughout women’s movements. At a very young age Rich was brought up

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    The Power Of Poetry

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    well with one audience but may not connect to another audience. Readers are the ones who determine exactly which pieces of poetry are powerful. When you combine radical feminism with amazing literary skills you obtain the astonishing powers of Adrienne Rich, a

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    source of power and information, which people constantly confuse with its opposite, the pornographic. According to Lorde, power comes from sharing deeply any pursuit with another person (Lorde 56). Lastly the theme of power is also represented in Adrienne Rich’s Compulsory

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    Adrienne Rich was a literary pioneer for American women during the contemporary era. Rich’s career spanned 60 years and she is most famous for her inspirational poetry that advocated for women. As an author, wife, mother, and Jew, Rich’s work encompassed the many prejudices that women face. Wendy Martin wrote, “Her work explores the experience of women who reject patriarchal definitions of femininity” (Martin 550). Adrienne Rich’s feminist upbringing inspired her poem “Snapshots of a Daughter-In-Law

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    Coal Adrienne Rich

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    I found the essay written by Adrienne Rich was very interesting and challenging at the same time. As I was reading the essay, I am not sure whether the questions come from the reader or Rich. At first, I thought it was the reader who question themselves and tried to find connection with the poetry. But then I realized it was not the case, I think what Rich was trying to say is that a poet shouldn’t limit the reader’s interpretation. For example, if Rich ask her reader “But what has this to do with

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    Adrienne Rich was a poet and essayist, and oane of America’s foremost public intellectuals. Widely read and hugely influential, Rich’s career spanned seven decades and has hewed closely to the sotry of post war American poetry itself. Her earliest work, was formally exact anddecorois, while her work of the late 1960s and 70s became increasingly radical in both its free verse form and feminist and political content. Rich’s metamorphosis was noted by Carol Muske in the New York Times Book Revier; Muske

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    Poet Adrienne Rich gave an inspiring speech during a convocation at Douglass College in 1977. Even though this was quite a few decades ago, her words are still relevant today. Education is still not taken as seriously as it should be and this is disappointing because it is the most important tool that leads to a successful life. Rich's speech describes how to "claim" an education rather than simply "receive" one, and this is something that all students need to take into consideration. Most students

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    relationship is perfect and neither are the people. In Adrienne Rich’s, “Living in Sin,” she quickly finds herself finding marriage completely different then what she may have thought it was before and realizing the sin of her boyfriend and herself not loving each other while finding herself doing routinely housework. In the woman’s idealistic relationship, she thought of her life being chore free not needing to do any house work as Adrienne Rich puts, “She had thought the studio would keep itself

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    Author Biography Adrienne Rich was a U.S. poet, scholar, and critic. She was born on May 16, 1929, in Baltimore, MD in the “white and middle-class”. She died on March 27, 2012, in Santa Cruz, California. Adrienne’s work shows her commitment to the women’s movement and a lesbian/feminist aesthetic influence. Adrienne was still in college when her poems were put out for publication. She won many honors for her works and activism. Adrienne started writing poetry as a child because of her father. Her

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    During the civil rights movement and the Vietnam war, Adrienne Rich has played a role of social activist and feminist. Adrienne Rich grew up in Baltimore and married Alfred Conrad who soon after started a family, had three children. Rich “struggled with the traditional expectations of being a wife and mother”[1], thus deciding to work as a poet who challenged society’s expectation and the inequality of power between men and women. Her husband later committed suicide after she distanced herself from

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