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“I shall miss you / When you have grown”Close “I shall miss you / When you have grown”Close
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The Post Office The Post Office
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Four “Of all the many changing things”11Close: Representing the Child
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Published:November 2020
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Abstract
This chapter examines the essential familial basis and paternalism that act as thematic foundations of much of Yeats’s and Tagore’s works, particularly those composed during times of personal and socio-political turmoil. In play are their ruminations about the role of the poet as part of the nation-making projects in Ireland and India. This chapter demonstrates that children as literary subjects and symbols embody visceral forms of hope, fear, parental anxiety, and perform politicized acts of border-crossing in several ways. In addition to the poetry of both authors, this chapter casts necessary light on Tagore’s The Post Office, a play that attests to the significance of ethical commentaries on social formations and empathetic dramatizations of trauma and grief through its rich transnational history of performance and adaptation through the twentieth century to the present day.
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