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ISBN: PB: 9780226663371

ISBN: HB: 9780226663234

University of Chicago Press

November 2019

256 pp.

21.5x13.9 cm

PB:
£20,00
QTY:
HB:
£57,00
QTY:

Categories:

Radical as Reality

Form and Freedom in American Poetry

What do American poets mean when they talk about freedom? How can form help us understand questions about what shapes we want to give our poetic lives, and how much power we have to choose those shapes? For that matter, what do we even mean by we? In this collection of essays, Peter Campion gathers his thoughts on these questions and more to form an evolutionary history of the past century of American poetry.             Through close readings of the great modernists, midcentury objectivists, late twentieth-century poets, his contemporaries, and more, Campion unearths an American poetic landscape that is subtler and more varied than most critics have allowed. He discovers commonalities among poets considered opposites, dramatizes how form and history are mutually entailing, and explores how the conventions of poetry, its inheritance, and its inventions sprang from the tensions of ordinary life. At its core, this is a book about poetic making, one that reveals how the best poets not only receive but understand and adapt what comes before them, reinterpreting the history of their art to create work that is, indeed, radical as reality.  

About the Author

Peter Campion teaches in the MFA program at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of two previous collections of poems, "Other People" and "The Lions", both published by the University of Chicago Press.