
Self-Portrait as Wikipedia Entry
Description
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"By writing honestly about the difficulties of self-representation, Rader represents himself as a writer who cares deeply about his audience and his craft." -ZYZZYVA
"Rader's poetry asks how to be an artist in a nation founded on and still struggling with the demand for representation and what poetry as a medium means in an era of representational sprawl." -Jacket
Wikipedia articles are never finalized. In Dean Rader's energized and inventive new book, the poet considers identity of self and society as a Wikipedia page-sculpted and transformed by the ever-present push and pull of politics, culture, and unseen forces. And, in the case of Rader, how identity can be affected by the likes of Paul Klee's paintings and the characters from the children's stories about Frog and Toad. Rader's cagey voice is full of humor and inquiry, warmly inviting readers to fully participate in the creation.
From How We Survive: A Tryptich:
This afternoon I took a nap
wearing a costume that looks
just like me. Inside it I felt like
another person who happened
to know so many things about me,
like my preference for almonds over
cashews, how sometimes, when
I am in a strange room, I imagine
hopping from one piece of
furniture to the next . . .
Born in Oklahoma, Dean Rader has published in the fields of poetry, American Indian studies, and popular culture. He is a professor of English at the University of San Francisco, and writes regularly on literature and politics for The San Francisco Chronicle.
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Content
- Cover
- Title Page
- Note to Reader
- Dedication
- Contents
- Self-Portrait with Reader
- American Self-Portrait I
- Apocryphal Self-Portrait
- Cartography
- or American Allegory I
- Frog Considers a Photograph by Andres Serrano Entitled Dissection
- Etiological Self-Portrait
- The Poem Chooses Its Own Adventure
- Self-Portrait with Obfuscation
- Self-Portrait with Contemplation
- Twenty Lines on Paul Klee's The Man in Love
- Poem of Prevarication to Begin the Second Section
- Poem in Which Readers Select Their Favorite Title
- Self-Portrait Bop
- American Self-Portrait II: Study of the Other Self
- Relational Self-Portrait
- Labor
- or American Allegory II
- Frog and Toad Confront Basho beneath the Wreckage of the Moon
- Autumnal Self-Portrait
- A Page of Spring
- Alternate Self-Portrait
- America, I Do Not Call Your Name without Hope
- Want
- or American Allegory III
- How We Survive: A Triptych
- American Self-Portrait III
- or What the Poet Thinks of Instead of War
- Not Long after Rich: A Study
- Frost on Fire
- Self-Portrait in Five Rooms
- Frog Considers Slipping Toad Pop RocksT
- Becoming Klee, Becoming Color
- American Self-Portrait IV
- Self-Portrait in Absentia
- Self-Portrait in Time
- Unable to Look Away from the Portrait of My Grandfather atop His Casket, I Write a Poem about My Newborn Son on the Back of the Funeral Program
- Self-Portrait in Charleston, Orlando
- Democracy
- or Poem in Which Readers Select Their Favorite Last Line
- American Allegory IV
- or Still Life with Peter Norman
- "America's frogs and toads disappearing fast"
- Still Life with Gratitude
- Forecast
- Poem for My Wife Composed Partially in the Manner of Chris and Desiree from The Bachelorette
- Poem for the World
- The Superpoem Is in Disguise
- Self-Portrait with Frog, Toad
- Self-Portrait at the End
- Self-Portrait in Space
- The Robot Washes Dishes on the Eve of the End of the World
- or American Allegory V
- Self-Portrait at Easter
- American Self-Portrait V
- Self-Portrait with Ghost, Rising
- Self-Portrait: Postmortem
- Paul Klee's Winter Journey at the Beginning of Spring
- About the Author
- or Self-Portrait as Wikipedia Entry
- Also by Dean Rader
- Self-Portrait with Acknowledgments
- Copyright
- Special Thanks
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