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Contemporary American poetry can often seem intimidating and
daunting in its variety and complexity. This engaging and
accessible book provides the first comprehensive introduction to
the rich body of American poetry that has flourished since 1945 and
offers a useful map to its current landscape. By exploring the
major poets, movements, and landmark poems at the heart of this
era, this book presents a compelling new version of the history of
American poetry that takes into account its variety and breadth,
its recent evolution in the new millennium, its ever-increasing
diversity, and its ongoing engagement with politics and culture.
Combining illuminating close readings of a wide range of
representative poems with detailed discussion of historical,
political, and aesthetic contexts, this book examines how poets
have tirelessly invented new forms and styles to respond to the
complex realities of American life and culture.
Contemporary American poetry can often seem intimidating and
daunting in its variety and complexity. This engaging and
accessible book provides the first comprehensive introduction to
the rich body of American poetry that has flourished since 1945 and
offers a useful map to its current landscape. By exploring the
major poets, movements, and landmark poems at the heart of this
era, this book presents a compelling new version of the history of
American poetry that takes into account its variety and breadth,
its recent evolution in the new millennium, its ever-increasing
diversity, and its ongoing engagement with politics and culture.
Combining illuminating close readings of a wide range of
representative poems with detailed discussion of historical,
political, and aesthetic contexts, this book examines how poets
have tirelessly invented new forms and styles to respond to the
complex realities of American life and culture.
Poetry has long been thought of as a genre devoted to grand
subjects, timeless themes, and sublime beauty. Why, then, have
contemporary poets turned with such intensity to documenting and
capturing the everyday and mundane? Drawing on insights about the
nature of everyday life from philosophy, history, and critical
theory, Andrew Epstein traces the modern history of this
preoccupation and considers why it is so much with us today.
Attention Equals Life argues that a potent hunger for everyday life
explodes in the post-1945 period as a reaction to the rapid,
unsettling transformations of this epoch, which have resulted in a
culture of perilous distraction. Epstein demonstrates that poetry
is an important, and perhaps unlikely, cultural form that has
mounted a response, and even a mode of resistance, to a culture
suffering from an acute crisis of attention. In this timely and
engaging study, Epstein examines why a compulsion to represent the
everyday becomes predominant in the decades after modernism and why
it has so often sparked genre-bending formal experimentation. With
chapters devoted to illuminating readings of a diverse group of
writers-including poets associated with influential movements like
the New York School, language poetry, and conceptual writing-the
book considers the variety of forms contemporary poetry of everyday
life has taken, and analyzes how gender, race, and political forces
all profoundly inflect the experience and the representation of the
quotidian. By exploring the rise of experimental realism as a
poetic mode and the turn to rule-governed "everyday-life projects,"
Attention Equals Life offers a new way of understanding a vital
strain at the heart of twentieth- and twenty-first century
literature. It not only charts the evolution of a significant
concept in cultural theory and poetry, but also reminds readers
that the quest to pay attention to the everyday within today's
frenetic world of and social media is an urgent and unending task.
Although it has long been commonplace to imagine the archetypal
American poet singing a solitary "Song of Myself," much of the most
enduring American poetry has actually been preoccupied with the
drama of friendship. In this lucid and absorbing study, Andrew
Epstein argues that an obsession with both the pleasures and
problems of friendship erupts in the "New American Poetry" that
emerges after the Second World War. By focusing on some of the most
significant postmodernist American poets--the "New York School"
poets John Ashbery, Frank O'Hara, and their close contemporary
Amiri Baraka--Beautiful Enemies reveals a fundamental paradox at
the heart of postwar American poetry and culture: the avant-garde's
commitment to individualism and nonconformity runs directly counter
to its own valorization of community and collaboration. In fact,
Epstein demonstrates that the clash between friendship and
nonconformity complicates the legendary alliances forged by postwar
poets, becomes a predominant theme in the poetry they created, and
leaves contemporary writers with a complicated legacy to negotiate.
Rather than simply celebrating friendship and poetic community as
nurturing and inspiring, these poets represent friendship as a kind
of exhilarating, maddening contradiction, a site of attraction and
repulsion, affinity and rivalry.
Challenging both the reductive critiques of American individualism
and the idealized, heavily biographical celebrations of literary
camaraderie one finds in much critical discussion, this book
provides a new interpretation of the peculiar dynamics of American
avant-garde poetic communities and the role of the individual
within them. By situating his extensive and revealing readings of
these highly influential poets against the backdrop of Cold War
cultural politics and within the context of American pragmatist
thought, Epstein uncovers the collision between radical
self-reliance and the siren call of the interpersonal at the core
of postwar American poetry.
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