In Our Time

Emily Dickinson (Archive Episode)

30 snips
Jan 8, 2026
Fiona Green, a Senior Lecturer at Cambridge, discusses the profound influence of Dickinson's upbringing in a sociable family and the intellectual landscape of Amherst. Linda Freedman, from University College London, delves into Dickinson's complex relationship with faith, highlighting her critical views on religion. Paraic Finnerty, a Reader at Portsmouth, examines Dickinson's reclusiveness and her intricate relationships, revealing how war imagery and violent metaphors fueled her poignant poetry. Together, they explore her unique voice and enduring legacy.
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INSIGHT

Amherst's Social And Intellectual Milieu

  • Emily Dickinson grew up in a socially active, educated Amherst family that shaped her intellect and opportunities.
  • Her broad schooling in sciences and classics informed the imagery and knowledge in her poetry.
INSIGHT

Religion As Creative Tension

  • Puritan and revivalist religion deeply shaped Dickinson's imagination and gave her material to react against.
  • She used sermons and religious language as both satire and a source for theological probing in her poems.
INSIGHT

Poems As Private Booklets

  • Dickinson compiled poems into hand-sewn booklets and treated them as private 'books' rather than publication-ready texts.
  • She shared selectively with chosen correspondents but rarely sought formal publication herself.
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