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Becoming a Creatrix: Women’s Religious Roles in W. B. Yeats and Olivia Shakespear

Date Issued
May 1, 2010
Author(s)
Childs, Elaine Kathyryn  
Advisor(s)
Lisi M. Schoenbach
Additional Advisor(s)
Nancy Goslee, Allen Dunn, Mark Hulsether
Abstract

This project is the biography of a symbol: that of the holy woman motif in William Butler Yeats’s oeuvre. For most of Yeats’s writing life, beautiful women have a place of spurious privilege in his spiritual imagination because they have an intrinsic connection with the divine otherworld. In chapters on Yeats’s beauty-worship in his long fin de siecle, Olivia Shakespear’s critique of that beauty-worship in her fiction, and the role of A Vision in The Winding Stair and Other Poems, I argue that Yeats revised the holy woman motif from a limited and limiting goddess or helpmeet role in his youthful work to a full-fledged religious meaning-maker--a Creatrix--in the last decade of his career.


I include a study of Olivia Shakespear’s fiction in this project because each of her seven fictional works critiques what she saw as the male tendency from which Yeats’s symbology sprang: the tendency to feign worship of a beautiful woman while simultaneously limiting her ability to be a Creatrix. However, the transformation that Yeats’s system underwent between the 1925 and 1937 versions of A Vision enabled the poet to create a model of religious identity that does not require the erasure of the self and its human desires and therefore makes space in his pantheon for the Creatrix.

Subjects

Yeats

women

feminism

Olivia Shakespear

A Vision

The Winding Stair

Disciplines
Literature in English, British Isles
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
English
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

childs_elaine.pdf

Size

831.12 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

a5b9b7d3857960cdbac7895f0258fd9a

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