18 pages 36 minutes read

Harryette Mullen

Dim Lady

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 2002

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Background

Literary Context

Language poetry is a literary movement that originated in diverse communities of San Francisco and New York in the 1960s and 1970s. Its focus on method and craft can be traced back to the modernist movement. Mullen’s “Dim Lady” is an example of Language poetry that contains poetic language that has been broken up unexpectedly; as a parody of Shakespeare’s sonnet 130, “Dim Lady” contains suggestions of Shakespeare’s original poem, and these fragments work together with Mullen’s language-focused use of contemporary dialect to create a completely unique poem.

Mullen’s identification with the Language school of poetry signals that she has moved away from established American poetic traditions in order to establish her own art form and style. Language poets are unique because they invite the reader in a deliberate way to look at how the language of poetry contributes to the meaning of the poem. For Language poets, the reader’s role in drawing out the meaning of a poem is the focus, and the roles of the speaker and the writer of the poem are minimized. This role reversal emphasizes the belief of Language poets that language leads to meaning, rather than the other way around.

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