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To Terrify and Comfort: Poetic Social Responsibility in The Dream Songs

Solberg, Matias S
Abstract
This thesis explores The Dream Songs by John Berryman as a deeply self-conscious and social poetic work. While often dismissed as opaque, erratic, and offensive—due in part to its use of minstrelsy, dream logic, and a volatile narrator—The Dream Songs emerges through close analysis as a literary project informed by personal trauma, cultural commentary, and a theatrical, multi-voiced structure. Through their main character Henry, Berryman constructs a dreamlike performance space in which private grief and public history—particularly American racial and literary legacies—collide and converse. This thesis draws on Edmund Wilson’s “The Wound and the Bow” to situate Berryman and his alter ego Henry as wounded artists, whose wounded selves reflect a wounded society. It also reconsiders Berryman’s “Homage to Mistress Bradstreet” as a technical and thematic precursor to the Songs, particularly in its experimentations with ventriloquism and identity. Finally, the thesis examines Berryman’s controversial use of blackface and minority voices, arguing that while ethically fraught, these choices underscore the text’s central concern with voice, otherness, and trauma. Rather than treating the Songs as completely incoherent and solipsistic, this thesis approaches them as the product of both a personal and societal imagination.
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2025-05-01
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English
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