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moderns and being superseded by a proliferating postmodern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—deconstructionist,
biographical-historical, 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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Culture, Community, and Form in Twentieth-Century American Poetry
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781587296673
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter