Lyric Shame
Title | Lyric Shame PDF eBook |
Author | Gillian White |
Publisher | Harvard University Press |
Total Pages | 361 |
Release | 2014-10-13 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 0674734394 |
Gillian White argues that the poetry wars among critics and practitioners are shaped by “lyric shame”—an unspoken but pervasive embarrassment over what poetry is, should be, and fails to be. “Lyric” is less a specific genre than a way to project subjectivity onto poems—an idealized poem that is nowhere and yet everywhere.
Lyric Eye
Title | Lyric Eye PDF eBook |
Author | Tyne Daile Sumner |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | 195 |
Release | 2021-08-05 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1000422275 |
Lyric Eye: The Poetics of Twentieth-Century Surveillance presents the first detailed study of the relationship between poetry and surveillance. It critically examines the close connection between American lyric poetry and a burgeoning US state surveillance apparatus from 1920 to the 1960s. The book explores the myriad ways that poets—Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, W.H. Auden, Langston Hughes, James Baldwin, Sylvia Plath, Gertrude Stein, Robert Lowell, Allen Ginsberg and others—explored a developing and fraught environment in which the growing power of American investigative agencies, such as the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover, imposed new pressures on cultural discourse and personal identity. In analysing twentieth-century American poetry and its various ideas about "the self," Lyric Eye demonstrates the extent to which poetry and surveillance employ similar styles of information-gathering such as observation, overhearing, imitation, abstraction, repurposing of language, subversion, fragmentation and symbolism. Ground-breaking and prescient, this book will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of literature, politics, surveillance and intelligence studies, and digital humanities.
Queer Troublemakers
Title | Queer Troublemakers PDF eBook |
Author | Prudence Bussey-Chamberlain |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Total Pages | 208 |
Release | 2019-08-08 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1350079367 |
Irreverent and provoking, the figure of the 'queer troublemaker' is a disruptive force both poetically and politically. Tracing the genealogy of this figure in modern avant-garde American poetry, Prudence Bussey-Chamberlain develops innovative close readings of the works of Gertrude Stein, Frank O'Hara, Eileen Myles and Maggie Nelson. Exploring how these writers play with identity, gender, sexuality and genre, Bussey-Chamberlain constructs a queer poetics of flippancy that can subvert ideas of success and failure, affect and affectation, performance and performativity, poetry and being.
The Lyric Voice in English Theology
Title | The Lyric Voice in English Theology PDF eBook |
Author | Elizabeth S. Dodd |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Total Pages | 201 |
Release | 2023-09-21 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 0567670317 |
In this book, Elizabeth S. Dodd traces the contours of a lyric theology through the lens of English lyric tradition. She addresses the dominance of narrative and drama in contemporary theological aesthetics by drawing on recent developments in lyric theory. Informed by the work of critics such as Jonathan Culler, Dodd explores the significance of lyric for theological discourse. Lyric is presented here as a short, musical, expressive and personal form that is also fragmentary, embodied, socially located and performative. The main chapters address key moments in English lyric tradition. This selective approach aims to expand the theological gaze beyond the monochromatic features of the traditional canon. It covers Anglo-Saxon hymns, medieval lullaby carols, early-modern sonnets and the prophetic poetry of Romanticism, but also Grime and hip hop, performance poetry, social media poetry and Geoffrey Hill.
Lyric as Comedy
Title | Lyric as Comedy PDF eBook |
Author | Calista McRae |
Publisher | Cornell University Press |
Total Pages | 233 |
Release | 2020-10-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1501750992 |
A poet walks into a bar... In Lyric as Comedy, Calista McRae explores the unexpected comic opportunities within recent American poems about deeply personal, often embarrassing, experiences. Lyric poems, she finds, can be surprising sites of a shifting, unruly comedy, as seen in the work of John Berryman, Robert Lowell, A. R. Ammons, Terrance Hayes, Morgan Parker, Natalie Shapero, and Monica Youn. Lyric as Comedy draws out the ways in which key American poets have struggled with persistent expectations about what expressive poetry can and should do. McRae reveals how the modern lyric, rather than bestowing order on the poet's thoughts and emotions, can center on impropriety and confusion, formal breakage and linguistic unruliness, and self-observation and self-staging. The close readings in Lyric as Comedy also provide new insight into the theory and aesthetics of comedy, taking in the indirect, glancing comic affordances of poetry. In doing so, McRae captures varieties of humor that do not align with traditional terms, centering abjection and pleasure as facets of contemporary lyric practice.
Lyric Trade
Title | Lyric Trade PDF eBook |
Author | Julia Bloch |
Publisher | University of Iowa Press |
Total Pages | 248 |
Release | 2024-04-29 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1609389441 |
Sometimes the word “lyric” seems to appear everywhere: either it’s used interchangeably with the word “poetry” or it attaches to descriptions of literature, art, film, and even ordinary objects in order to capture some quality of aesthetic appeal or meaning. Lyric Trade is not yet another attempt to define the lyric, but instead it digs into how poems use lyric in relation to race, gender, nation, and empire. Engaging with poets such as Gwendolyn Brooks, H.D., Lorine Niedecker, Alice Notley, and Myung Mi Kim, this book asks: What does lyric mean, and why should it matter to poets and readers? Lyric Trade argues that lyric in the postwar long poem not only registers the ideological contradictions of modernism’s insistence on new forms, but that it also maps spaces for formal reimaginings of the subject.
The Sound Sense of Poetry
Title | The Sound Sense of Poetry PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Robinson |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | 243 |
Release | 2018-09-13 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 1108422969 |
Robinson explains how poetry makes things happen through the interaction of its chosen words and forms with the reader's responses.