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Bestseller
BestsellerE-book
Author Estrin, Barbara L., 1942-

Title The American love lyric after Auschwitz and Hiroshima / Barbara L. Estrin.

Publication Info. New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2001.

Item Status

Edition 1st ed.
Description 1 online resource (253 pages)
text file
Contents Theorizing the lyric -- "Form gulping after formlessness": Petrarch's resistant Lauras in Steven's "Auroras of autumn" -- "The intricate evasions of As": history's duplicities in Steven's "An ordinary evening in New Haven" -- "Infinite mischief": Robert Lowell's fiction of desire in The dolphin -- "Solid with yearning": Lowelling and Laureling in Day by day -- Reversing the past: Adrienne Rich's outrage against order -- "At long last first": Adrienne Rich's Dark fields and Samuel Beckett's colorless Cliff -- After-words.
Summary "Citing the massive horrors of the Nazi death camps and the domestic violence behind a woman's suicide, Adrienne Rich challenges a fellow poet: "would it relieve you to decide 'Poetry doesn't make this happen'?" In her provocative reassessment of the modern American love lyric, Barbara L. Estrin pursues Rich's question and discovers the connection between the language of love poetry and the rhetoric of hate speech that culminated in the genocides of World War II. The American Love Lyric After Auschwitz and Hiroshima chronicles the return of three major American poets (Wallace Stevens, Robert Lowell, and Adrienne Rich) to the mid-century catastrophes that reveal the unexpected links between poetry and war. Through close readings of individual poems and drawing upon gender and genre theories, Estrin counters the presupposition that the lyric remains sequestered in apolitical isolation. Her case that Stevens, Lowell, and Rich view the Petrarchan conventions they inherit from their European predecessors as contributive to the ideologies that went awry in the twentieth century constitutes a revisionist critique of American poetry. She also explores the prevalent influence of the traditional forms that all three poets simultaneously use and revise as they render the love lyric responsive to the cultural agonies of the postwar era."--Jacket.
Access Concurrent user level: 1 user
Subject Stevens, Wallace, 1879-1955 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Stevens, Wallace, 1879-1955.
Criticism and interpretation.
Lowell, Robert, 1917-1977 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Lowell, Robert, 1917-1977.
Rich, Adrienne, 1929-2012 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Rich, Adrienne, 1929-2012.
Love poetry, American -- History and criticism.
Love poetry, American.
American poetry -- 20th century -- History and criticism.
American poetry.
Chronological Term 20th century
Subject World War, 1939-1945 -- United States -- Literature and the war.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature.
Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) in literature.
Hiroshima-shi (Japan) -- History -- Bombardment, 1945 -- Influence.
War and literature.
United States.
Bombardment of Hiroshima-shi (Hiroshima-shi, Japan : 1945)
World War (1939-1945)
Chronological Term 1900-1999
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
History.
Other Form: Print version: Estrin, B. American Love Lyric after Auschwitz and Hiroshima. New York : Palgrave Macmillan, ©2016
ISBN 1137067659
9781137067654 (electronic book)