This paper examines the dynamics of inclusion and exclusion in the poetry of Elizabeth Bishop through feminist and postmodernist perspectives. Bishop’s poetic voice negotiates belonging and marginality by foregrounding displacement, loss, and fragmented identity. Rather than presenting a unified lyrical self, her poems construct subjectivity as unstable and relational, reflecting postmodern skepticism toward fixed meanings. From a feminist standpoint, Bishop subtly challenges patriarchal structures by resisting confessional authority and adopting observational distance, thereby redefining poetic agency. Her representations of objects and domestic spaces become symbolic terrains where inclusion is desired yet deferred, and exclusion becomes both constraint and creative possibility. The study argues that Bishop’s restrained style masks a deeper critique of gendered and cultural boundaries. By reading her work through the intersecting lenses of feminism and postmodernism, the paper highlights how Bishop reconfigures poetic space into a site where identity is continuously negotiated rather than resolved.
Mujahid Ahmed Mohammed Alwaqaa (Sat,) studied this question.
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