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The Dickinsons of Amherst [Hardcover]

Christopher Benfey (Editor), Polly Longsworth (Editor), Barton Levi St. Armand (Editor), Jerome Liebling (Photographer)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 1, 2001
Jerome Liebling, one of our foremost documentary photographers, has created a remarkable photographic record of the domestic environment of Emily Dickinson. As a fellow resident of Amherst, Massachusetts, Liebling was naturally drawn to the Homestead, the house in which Dickinson lived and worked. But more remarkably, Liebling had the opportunity to document the opening of the Homestead's dark sister, the Evergreens -- an Italianate villa built for Emily's brother, Austin, which until recently was still inhabited but which had been preserved almost as a time capsule of the era of Emily and Austin.

Though Dickinson lived as a recluse in the Homestead, she did not live in the utter isolation that has been popularly imagined. Her life was intimately bound up with the affairs of her friends and family, and the domestic situation at the Evergreens inevitably contributed to the environment in which she wrote her poems. Austin Dickinson's troubled marriage and his affair with Mabel Loomis Todd eventually gave rise to the bitter disputes over the disposition of property and the guardianship of Emily's poetic legacy that erupted after his death. In Liebling's evocative photographs, the stark austerity of the Homestead and the decaying opulence of the Evergreens offer new insights into the home life that shaped a poet.

Three of the foremost scholars of Dickinson's life and work have contributed essays that explore the history and legacy of these two dwellings. Polly Longsworth, who wrote the definitive account of Austin's affair with Mabel Loomis Todd and who is at work on a major new biography of the poet, reveals some of the information her researches have brought to light -- including a new recognition that Dickinson's anxiety problems were a real and integral condition of her existence, an understanding that demystifies some of the more enigmatic aspects of her life, including her refusal to publish. Barton Levi St. Armand, meanwhile, shares the remarkable and previously untold inside story of Mary Hampson, the last resident of the Evergreens, and of the lives connected with the house over the last century; it was through the efforts of Hampson -- the heir of Austin's daughter -- that the Evergreens was saved from destruction and is now (like the Homestead) open to the public. Finally, Christopher Benfey offers an insightful appreciation of Liebling's photographs and the light they shed on Dickinson and her work; he teases out surprising but convincing affinities between the poems and the art of photography.

The heart of this book is the one hundred plus photographs through which Jerome Liebling expands our understanding of Emily Dickinson's world and life. "You might say that the three essays are extended captions," says Benfey in his introduction, "taking their prompting and provocation from the images."

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Emily Dickinson's famous reclusivemess essentially meant that family property marked the boundaries of her world. The Dickinsons of Amherst takes as one of its subjects the relationship between the poet's domestic space the Homestead, where she lived, and the Evergreens, which was built for her brother and her interior creative life. Documentary photographer and Amherst resident Jerome Liebling's hauntingly beautiful photographs (138 in color) of gates, bedrooms, family portraits and Dickinson's ghostly white dress are complemented by essays by three prominent Dickinson scholars, including one by Christopher Benfey (Emily Dickinson: Lives of a Poet) that allies the art of the photographer to the art of the poet.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review

". . . When she died, she [Emily Dickinson] left a drawer crammed with hundreds of poems that engage the shimmer between the living and dead--as this book does. Unreachable through either words or pictures alone, the effect of this multidimensional book is to break your heart."--Atlantic Monthly

"Mr. Liebling's evocative photographs . . . effectively capture the spirit of the two houses. They focus on poignant images like a light-struck glass knob at the Homestead, which casts ghostly reflections on a white door; worn stone steps in Emily's garden; her plain white dress, preserved in a glass case; a nest of scuffed children's shoes stored at the Evergreens; and the long march of picket fence along Main Street--now gone--that once united the two homes."--New York Times, (Weekend Excursion)

"The beautiful photographs and insightful essays in The Dickinsons of Amherst offer fresh retellings of [the Dickinson story] . . . The essays, Liebling's photographs and older photos from the heyday of the Dickinsons in Amherst interact beautifully . . . [the book] illuminates the poet and her work in incandescent ways."--Chicago Tribune

"Visitors to either house who peruse the book will marvel at [Liebling's] artistry, at the way he can home in on a detail and make it stand for something larger, just as Dickinson did in her spare verses."--Boston Globe, "Life at Home" section

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 220 pages
  • Publisher: UPNE; 1st edition (September 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1584650680
  • ISBN-13: 978-1584650683
  • Product Dimensions: 11.4 x 11.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #828,249 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Funny . . . On my visits to the Dickinson homestead, April 12, 2005
This review is from: The Dickinsons of Amherst (Hardcover)
. . . I never once got the impression I was seeing mere replicas of Miss Emily's possessions. On the contrary, the room at the head of the stairs was "full" of her--one could sense her presence!--and we were told by the tour guide that the items of memorabilia were actually things used by her: the narrow bed, the small desk, and, most certainly, that ghostly white dress (her "white election") on the dressmaker's dummy in the corner. I don't know what the reviewer is referring to when he/she complains of Dickinson's artifacts being at Harvard and that the things featured in this marvelous book are merely copies. I have absolutely no doubt that the things I saw in Miss Dickinson's upstairs room, as well as all other things pointed out in the remainder of the house, bore evidence of her. And the the grounds made one feel as if she'd just lately left them... This book features all these beautifully and hauntingly. I have no reason to so much as suspect that I did not see the artifacts of Miss Dickinson's life, and I have no doubt but that those are indeed the very things photographed so lovingly in this gorgeous and haunting book. Perusing it is like visiting the Squire Dickinson house in Amherst all over again, even though I'm miles away from it and cannot now go back again. That makes the book all the more worthy of cherishing. Both photographs and essays come together in a lovely evocation of Miss Emily's life.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dis-spiriting, November 12, 2005
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This review is from: The Dickinsons of Amherst (Hardcover)
This book is so frustrating, I almost don't want to review it, but here's my 60 second review: anyone who loves Emily Dickinson's mind-her temperament, her cognitive style, her insights, her ironical sensibility-will likely find this book wrongheaded-or extraneous. For brevity and to illustrate the objectionable spirit of the book, I'll confine my critique to Barton Levi St. Armand's essay, which is really its heart.

St. Armand begins wooing (his own metaphor) the aged Mary Hampson, latter-day Miss Havisham and final inhabitant of The Evergreens, Austin Dickinson's home. Hampson is not related to the Dickinsons and came into ownership of the home under bizarre and slightly dubious circumstances; clearly she's suffering from paranoid delusions, and her passion for Martha Dickinson Bianchi and against Mabel Todd reflects perhaps a combination of psychosexual obsession, egotism, need for a cause. (I find it ironic that essayist Polly Longsworth goes to the effort of diagnosing Emily Dickinson with avoidant personality disorder and various anxiety disorders, something I'd dispute or at least find in poor taste; but then this obvious nut, Mary Hampson, is portrayed as a grand dame, an artiste.)

In any event, you can imagine the details: she invites and repels various academics; if they please her, they get to plunder her literary treasures. St. Armand wins the courtship, gets the keys to the house, serves as head trustee for the newly formed Martha Dickinson Bianchi trust, and in the process loses any sense of objective vision or irony; he's won the courtship and won't admit the bride is ugly. (This in itself is ironic, since the essay discusses opthamological imagery: strabismus, exophoria, exotropia relative to E.D.) St. Armand is lost! He digs up swamp magnolias to transplant to his garden, seems to think it's charming when Mary Hampson habitually kicks Richard Sewall's (to my thinking subtle, excellent) volumes of biography.

And who is Mary Hampson? "I recall my mother joining me once, and Mary saying to her, `You don't care a damn about Emily Dickinson, do you!' This was a mark of approval rather than of disdain..." he writes. On another occasion, Hampson says, "For me Martha is the greater poet-because I knew her." Then, "...it has suddenly occurred to me that there could be another reason why Sue did not finish the work she had started on Emily. All these pseudoscholars never seem to realize that Susan and Martha had lives of their own' and so could not waste all their time `just sitting around here-a couple of Emily shadows.'" (Ahem-irony there.) I just want to clarify that the final occupant of The Evergreens actually seems contemptuous of Emily Dickinson. She's for the "Dickinsons of the Evergreens."

Why does this matter to the spirit of the book? Because St. Armand finally makes the (absurd) point of comparing, even equating, Mary Hampson's work in preserving the tattered, mildewing remnants of The Evergreens to Emily Dickinson's work as a poet. That the doors of The Evergreens were opened to Jerome Liebling to photograph, before the house finally decomposed or underwent renovation, seems an excellent idea, and many of the luminous photos--tattered Morris wallpaper in lurid tones--are lovely. But I object, finally, to the disingenuous manipulation of imagery in the book, the juxtaposition of tight, bright, white "Emily" photos and the tatters and shreds of the neighboring home. Even the captions are condescending and misleading: "A tear in the William Morris pattern: Susan Dickinson's damaged household"-as if we're beholding the paper she tore with her hands during a domestic argument. No bias here, nope. Finally, the family story of the Dickinsons is only interesting and relevant to the degree that it illuminates and expands meaning in ED's poems, and I think it takes a subtler hand, a slower accretion of detail to accomplish that.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect gift for anyone who loves Emily!, December 22, 2011
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Melissa Metzger (Shoreline, WA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Dickinsons of Amherst (Hardcover)
I gave this as a gift for a friend who loves Emily Dickinson and she was absolutely thrilled. The pictures are great and the setup really nice. It is quite a wonderful book!
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