The Dark End of the Street
Margins in American Vanguard Poetry
Maria Damon(Author)
University of Minnesota Press
Published on 1. January 1993
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-0-8166-1986-3 (ISBN)
Description
Maria Damon brings a new sensitivity to modern poetic criticism. She adds an important dimension to cultural theory, revealing the struggles of American poets as they address important questions about art, social life, and the oppression they encounter. Taking as her premise that the intensity of poetic language is an appropriate venue for representing the "dark end of the street" of social pain, Damon foregrounds the work and lives of a number of modern American poets in order to argue that the American avant-garde is located in the experimental literary works of social "outsiders." Unlike most literary studies on poetry and poetics, "The Dark End of the Street" examines an unusually wide range of poets and poetic activities. Damon explores avant-garde poetry as writing that pushes at the limits of experience as well as at the limits of conventional form. She argues that the marginalized and oppressed, ostensibly the most expendable members of American society, have produced its truly vanguard literature.
Damon brings a sense of social context to a field long dominated by purely formalist criticism, ultimately revealing how time, place, and circumstance affect the creation, distribution, and reception of modern poetry. This book is intended for contemporary American poetry studies, cultural studies, and American studies.
Damon brings a sense of social context to a field long dominated by purely formalist criticism, ultimately revealing how time, place, and circumstance affect the creation, distribution, and reception of modern poetry. This book is intended for contemporary American poetry studies, cultural studies, and American studies.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Minnesota
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
Weight
540 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8166-1986-3 (9780816619863)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
Introductions and interdictions; "Unmeaning jagon" / Uncanonized beatitude: Bob Kaufman, Poet; The child who writes / The child who died; Dirty jokes and angels: Jack Spicer and Robert Duncan - Writing the Gay community; Gertrude Stein's doggerel "Yiddish": women, dogs and Jews; Afterword: closer than close.