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American Poetry: A Very Short Introduction
American Poetry: A Very Short Introduction
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  • Introduces readers to a genre many find challenging, vast, and contentious in an accessible and enjoyable style
  • Offers a new theory of American poetry
  • Argues that two characteristics define American poetry: an emphasis on its uniqueness and its transnationalism

    
A leading critic explains what makes American poetry--a vast genre covering diverse styles, techniques, and form--distinctive.
  
In this short and engaging volume, David Caplan proposes a new theory of American poetry. With lively writing and illuminating examples, Caplan argues that two characteristics mark the vast, contentious literature. On the one hand, several of America's major poets and critics claim that America needs a poetry equal to the country's distinctiveness. They advocate for novelty and for a break with what is perceived to be outmoded and foreign. On the other hand, American poetry welcomes techniques, styles, and traditions that originate from far beyond its borders. The force of these two competing characteristics, American poetry's emphasis on its uniqueness and its transnationalism, drives both individual accomplishment and the broader field. These two characteristic features energize American poetry, quickening its development into a great national literature that continues to inspire poets in the contemporary moment.
   
American Poetry: A Very Short Introduction moves through history and honors the poets' artistry by paying close attention to the verse forms, meters, and styles they employ. Examples range from Anne Bradstreet, writing a century before the United States was founded, to the poets of the Black Lives Matter movement. Individual chapters consider how other major figures such as T.S. Eliot, Phillis Wheatley, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, W.H. Auden, and Langston Hughes emphasize convention or idiosyncrasy, and turn to American English as an important artistic resource. This concise examination of American poetry enriches our understanding of both the literature's distinctive achievement and the place of its most important writers within it.

Index: 

List of illustrations
Introduction

1. American English as a Poetic Resource
2. Convention and Idiosyncrasy
3. Auden and Eliot: Two Complicating Examples
4. Conclusion: On the Present and Future of American Poetry
References
Further Reading
Index

About the author: 
  • Introduces readers to a genre many find challenging, vast, and contentious in an accessible and enjoyable style
  • Offers a new theory of American poetry
  • Argues that two characteristics define American poetry: an emphasis on its uniqueness and its transnationalism

      
A leading critic explains what makes American poetry--a vast genre covering diverse styles, techniques, and form--distinctive.
   
In this short and engaging volume, David Caplan proposes a new theory of American poetry. With lively writing and illuminating examples, Caplan argues that two characteristics mark the vast, contentious literature. On the one hand, several of America's major poets and critics claim that America needs a poetry equal to the country's distinctiveness. They advocate for novelty and for a break with what is perceived to be outmoded and foreign. On the other hand, American poetry welcomes techniques, styles, and traditions that originate from far beyond its borders. The force of these two competing characteristics, American poetry's emphasis on its uniqueness and its transnationalism, drives both individual accomplishment and the broader field. These two characteristic features energize American poetry, quickening its development into a great national literature that continues to inspire poets in the contemporary moment.
  
American Poetry: A Very Short Introduction 
moves through history and honors the poets' artistry by paying close attention to the verse forms, meters, and styles they employ. Examples range from Anne Bradstreet, writing a century before the United States was founded, to the poets of the Black Lives Matter movement. Individual chapters consider how other major figures such as T.S. Eliot, Phillis Wheatley, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, W.H. Auden, and Langston Hughes emphasize convention or idiosyncrasy, and turn to American English as an important artistic resource. This concise examination of American poetry enriches our understanding of both the literature's distinctive achievement and the place of its most important writers within it.
 

Product details

ISBN : 9780190640194

Author: 
David Caplan
Pages
160 Pages
Format
Paperback
Size
111 x 175 mm
Pub date
Feb 2021
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American Poetry: A Very Short Introduction

American Poetry: A Very Short Introduction

American Poetry: A Very Short Introduction