id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_lvwklahxajdwba3xwl4fhdmxbq Páraic Finnerty "If fame belonged to me, I could not escape her": Dickinson and the Poetics of Celebrity 2017.0 36 .pdf application/pdf 10293 583 60 "If fame belonged to me, I could not escape her": Dickinson and the Poetics of Celebrity participation in a culture of literary fandom driven by a powerful attraction to and nearobsession with admired writers and all things associated with them. celebrates her brother's letter in and through the discourse associated with Lind's fame. Although Dickinson refers to and admires American literary celebrities such as Henry poem, here Dickinson uses death as the ultimate barrier protecting writers from their fans and or celebrity encounter, however, Dickinson's poems stress the writer's ghostliness, at a time In other poems, Dickinson juxtaposes the mediated nature of celebrity and publicity Dickinson's poems about personal immortality or a admirers, Dickinson's poems underline a connection between a culture of a celebrity and made her the dead renowned figures, Dickinson also creates fan-like speakers who scrutinize In these poems, Dickinson's makes public the "solitude of death" (Fr1696), ./cache/work_lvwklahxajdwba3xwl4fhdmxbq.pdf ./txt/work_lvwklahxajdwba3xwl4fhdmxbq.txt