Reading the Middle Generation Anew: Culture, Community, and Form in Twentieth-Century American PoetryEric Haralson University of Iowa Press, 2006 M05 1 - 271 páginas Ten original essays by advanced scholars and well-published poets address the middle generation of American poets, including the familiar---Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, Randall Jarrell, and John Berryman---and various important contemporaries: Delmore Schwartz, Theodore Roethke, Robert Hayden, and Lorine Niedecker. This was a famously troubled cohort of writers, for reasons both personal and cultural, and collectively their poems give us powerful, moving insights into American social life in the transforming decades of the 1940s through the 1960s.In addition to having worked during the broad middle of the last century, these poets constitute the center of twentieth-century American poetry in the larger sense, refuting invidious connotations of “middle” as coming after the great moderns and being superseded by a proliferating postmodern experimentation. This middle generation mediates the so-called American century and its prodigious body of poetry, even as it complicates historical and aesthetic categorizations.Taking diverse formal and thematic angles on these poets---biographical-historical, deconstructionist, and more formalist accounts---this book re-examines their between-ness and ambivalence: their various positionings and repositionings in aesthetic, political, and personal matters. The essays study the interplay between these writers and such shifting formations as religious discourse, consumerism, militarism and war, the ideology of America as “nature's nation,” and U.S. race relations and ethnic conflicts. Reading the Middle Generation Anew also shows the legacy of the middle generation, the ways in which their lives and writings continue to be a shaping force in American poetry. This fresh and invigorating collection will be of great interest to literary scholars and poets. |
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Página 184
... human activity and emotion , since they are mutually im- bricated in the discourse of history . In this way ... human activity . But in Roethke's conception , the natural world is not accountable to humanity and its " wars " or ...
... human activity and emotion , since they are mutually im- bricated in the discourse of history . In this way ... human activity . But in Roethke's conception , the natural world is not accountable to humanity and its " wars " or ...
Página 185
... human invention of " pseudo - cyclical time ” and the " cyclical time " of nature , suggesting that modern capitalist society has severed itself from the rhythms of biological , meteorological , and geo- logical time and adopted a ...
... human invention of " pseudo - cyclical time ” and the " cyclical time " of nature , suggesting that modern capitalist society has severed itself from the rhythms of biological , meteorological , and geo- logical time and adopted a ...
Página 193
... human experience in America merges with the physical attributes of its corresponding land- scapes . To be sure , Roethke had always understood the capacity of the natu- ral world to represent human turmoil in his poetry . This new ...
... human experience in America merges with the physical attributes of its corresponding land- scapes . To be sure , Roethke had always understood the capacity of the natu- ral world to represent human turmoil in his poetry . This new ...
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Reading the Middle Generation Anew: Culture, Community, and Form in ... Eric Haralson Vista previa limitada - 2006 |
Reading the Middle Generation Anew: Culture, Community, and Form in ... Eric Haralson Vista de fragmentos - 2006 |
Términos y frases comunes
aesthetic American poets argues Auden Benjamin Berryman Bidart Bob Lowell Bob Lowell's Cambridge Chattarji Collected Poems consciousness consumer culture contemporary context critics critique Day by Day death Delmore Schwartz Dream Songs edited Edwards elegies and elegiac Elizabeth Bishop essay experience Farrar Father's Bedroom flyleaf Flynn Frank Bidart Freud Gender Hayden's elegies human images inscriptions irony Jarrell's John Berryman John Brown landscape Letters Levertov Library lines literary living Lorine Niedecker lyric Mass Culture metaphor modern modernist mourning Niedecker Niedecker's past perspective poem's poetic poetry political present prose Protestant Randall Jarrell readers references will appear Review Robert Hayden Robert Lowell Roethke Roethke's Sad Heart Selected Poems sense sentimental social soldiers speaker stanza Straus and Giroux Subsequent references appear suggests Supermarket television text abbreviated theater tion trauma Union Dead University Press Vietnam Vietnam War W. H. Auden Walter Benjamin Williams Winslow writing York