id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_wxzkefgxczczjdzhtkiwlv6lcm Merrill Cole Remaking Sense: Gertrude Stein and the Names of the Father 2008 17 .pdf application/pdf 6315 515 67 enables Stein "to find a place for herself in the tradition of patriarchal poetry" (1). While Dickie demonstrates that Stein herself writes patriarchal poetry, rather than simply protesting against masculine tradition, it does not follow that Stein "identifies with the patriarchy," Dickie maintains that Stein's "coded language" provides a means "to conceal her subject from an audience unaware of the code and further afford[s] her an In the dismissal of identity and memory in Patriarchal Poetry, Stein Stein's assiduous disarticulations of patriarchal poetry are also different articulations of Stein's designation, "human mind," suggests, this also means In Stein's Patriarchal Poetry, the traditional forms of versification play across the text in permutation. "Patriarchal poetry," Stein claims, "more than wishes," but The question that Stein poses in Patriarchal Poetry, "Is he fond woman writer can produce patriarchal poetry and that Stein "Patriarchal poetry," Stein tells us, "makes no mistake" (576): ./cache/work_wxzkefgxczczjdzhtkiwlv6lcm.pdf ./txt/work_wxzkefgxczczjdzhtkiwlv6lcm.txt