One Kind of Everything: Poem and Person in Contemporary America

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University of Chicago Press, 2008 M08 15 - 208 páginas

One Kind of Everything elucidates the uses of autobiography and constructions of personhood in American poetry since World War II, with helpful reference to American literature in general since Emerson. Taking on one of the most crucial issues in American poetry of the last fifty years, celebrated poet Dan Chiasson explores what is lost or gained when real-life experiences are made part of the subject matter and source material for poetry. In five extended, scholarly essays—on Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, Frank Bidart, Frank O’Hara, and Louise Glück—Chiasson looks specifically to bridge the chasm between formal and experimental poetry in the United States. Regardless of form, Chiasson argues that recent American poetry is most thoughtful when it engages most forcefully with autobiographical material, either in an effort to embrace it or denounce it.

 

Contenido

One Kind of Everything
1
Robert Lowell
24
Elizabeth Bishop on Autobiographical Grounds
45
Reading Frank Bidart Pragmatically
79
The Tenses of Frank OHara
109
Forms of Narrative in the Poetry of Louise Gluck
136
Autobiography and the Language School
168
Works Cited
179
Index
183
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Acerca del autor (2008)

Dan Chiasson is visiting assistant professor of English at Wellesley College. He is the author of two books of poetry, Natural History and The Afterlife of Objects, the latter published by the University of Chicago Press.

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