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When secondary school or university students are asked what they
find hardest about studying English, the most popular answer by far
is poetry. This book is the first poetry analysis guide intended
for all candidates studying English at secondary and university
levels. Importantly, it is a "pocket guide" - concise and
accessible. This means that all students will be able to find it
useful, whether they happen to be struggling in the subject or
trying to secure their own top-grade performance. The guide is
organised into five short, reader-friendly chapters: an
introduction, "Why is Poetry Difficult?", "What do Poems Mean?",
"The Challenge of Poetic Form", and "How to Write an Essay on a
Poem". Each of these chapters challenges particular
misunderstandings about poetry while presenting some clear,
practical strategies for how to analyse poems.
In discussions of American poetry since World War II, the work of
John Berryman has become increasingly neglected and marginalized.
Critics have overwhelmingly chosen to favour the notion that he is
an academic, 'establishment' poet whose career can comfortably be
described as a move from New Critical traditionalism towards
self-absorbed confessionalism. This study shows how such a narrow
understanding of Berryman's work is reflective of a broader
critical inclination towards a codification of the literary canon
as a duel between competing factions of a formalist, establishment
'mainstream' and an experimentalist, countercultural 'avant-garde'.
By examining the extent to which Berryman's poetry engages with the
complex religio-political climate of Cold War American culture,
this study exposes the inadequacy of the paradigm of mainstream
traditionalism in relation to his work. In doing so, it opens up
threads of comparative possibility between his work and that of
poets ordinarily segregated from him by divisive conceptions of the
literary canon. As such, this volume provides a reconsideration of
Berryman's work that simultaneously asks broader questions about
the nature of the American poetic canon and established definitions
of 'postmodern' poetry.
'A brilliant book . . . brilliantly written. You really do need to
read it' Adrian Chiles 'Mixing the sacred and the profane, high
culture and low culture, the sublime and the ridiculous, Deep
Pockets is the book this game of unfathomable difficulty and
infinite mystery well deserves' Critic The game of snooker has a
remarkable history. From humble origins, it blossomed spectacularly
in the 1980s into the nation's most popular sport. Top players
became celebrities. The papers were stuffed with snooker scandals.
It even conquered the pop charts. In the twenty-first century, the
game is still big news. Along with millions of British fans, a vast
audience continues to grow across every corner of the world, from
Europe to the Middle East to China. The global thirst for snooker
has never been greater. But - strangely perhaps - snooker's deeper
meanings have rarely been explored. It is a game that celebrates
subtlety and mystery; a slow undertaking in a fast-paced world.
Elegant and profound, snooker invites serious contemplation. Deep
Pockets is a study of this uncharted territory - a love letter to
snooker, and an impassioned journey into its soul. Because snooker,
in fact, is more than a game. It is a belief set; a way of seeing;
an entire philosophical system. In chapters that cover everything
from time, truth, loss, luck and more, Deep Pockets explores how
snooker can help us to trace the meaning of life itself.
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