An Atlas of the Difficult World: Poems 1988-1991
Title | An Atlas of the Difficult World: Poems 1988-1991 PDF eBook |
Author | Adrienne Rich |
Publisher | W. W. Norton & Company |
Pages | 66 |
Release | 1991-12-17 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 0393345742 |
Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. In this, her thirteenth book of verse, the author of "The Dream of a Common Language" and "Snapshots of a Daughter-in-Law" writes of war, oppression, the future, death, mystery, love and the magic of poetry.
Poems: Selected and New, 1950-1974
Title | Poems: Selected and New, 1950-1974 PDF eBook |
Author | Adrienne Rich |
Publisher | W. W. Norton |
Pages | 284 |
Release | 1974 |
Genre | American poetry |
ISBN |
Time's Power: Poems 1985-1988
Title | Time's Power: Poems 1985-1988 PDF eBook |
Author | Adrienne Rich |
Publisher | W. W. Norton & Company |
Pages | 59 |
Release | 1989-05-17 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 039334813X |
Time's Power is a new book by a major American poet, and a landmark in a distinguished ongoing career. For thirty years, Rich's poetry has revealed the individual personal life—sexualities, loves, damages, struggles—as inseparable from a wider social condition, a world with others, in which the empowering of the disempowered is increasingly the source of human hope. Now her mature vision engages with the power of time itself: memory and its contradictions, the ebb and flow between parents and children, the deaths we all face sooner or later, the meaning of human responsibility in all this. "Letters in the Family," for example, is written in the voices of three women—from the Spanish Civil War, from a Jewish rescue mission behind Nazi lines, and from present-day Southern Africa. Time's Power shows Rich writing with unprecedented range, complexity, and authority.
Dark Fields of the Republic: Poems 1991-1995
Title | Dark Fields of the Republic: Poems 1991-1995 PDF eBook |
Author | Adrienne Rich |
Publisher | W. W. Norton & Company |
Pages | 90 |
Release | 1995-09-17 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 0393348067 |
"When does a life bend towards freed? grasp its direction" asks Adrienne Rich in Dark Fields of the Republic, her major new work. Her explorations go to the heart of democracy and love, and the historical and present endangerment of both. A theater of voices of men and women, the dead and the living, over time and across continents, the poems of Dark Fields of the Republic take conversations, imaginary and real, actions taken for better or worse, out of histories and songs to extend the poet's reach of witness and power of connection--and then invites the reader to participate.
The Dream and the Dialogue
Title | The Dream and the Dialogue PDF eBook |
Author | Alice Templeton |
Publisher | Univ. of Tennessee Press |
Pages | 212 |
Release | 1994 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9780870498596 |
"Adrienne Rich's poetry has long engaged critics in questions about the nature of poetic art, the character of poetic tradition, and the value of poetry as a political and cultural activity. At the same time, it has attracted many general readers, largely because it expresses the personal, social, and intellectual crises faced by feminists during the last thirty years." "In this study, Alice Templeton looks at the ways in which feminist thinking has influenced Rich's poetics while, simultaneously, her poetic practice has shaped her feminist conceptions. Templeton begins by exploring the tensions between epic, eulogistic, and lyric claims made in the poems collected in Diving into the Wreck (1973). She then examines the strategies Rich uses in subsequent collections to test and refine her feminist thinking. Templeton focuses, in particular, on the "dialogic moments" of cultural participation that Rich's poetry provides for the poet and the reader. These "moments," Templeton argues, can dispel myths of social determinism even as they implicate readers in an ethically charged communal bond." "By demonstrating the contributions that Rich has made both to feminist thinking and to our ways of reading poetic tradition, The Dream and the Dialogue treats Rich as a poet of ideas and places her work solidly in the context of contemporary literary theory."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved
What Noise Against the Cane
Title | What Noise Against the Cane PDF eBook |
Author | Desiree C. Bailey |
Publisher | Yale University Press |
Pages | 93 |
Release | 2021-04-13 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 0300256531 |
The 115th volume of the Yale Series of Younger Poets is a lyrical and polyvocal exploration of what it means to fight for yourself “Bailey invites us to see what twenty-first-century life is like for a young woman of the Black diaspora in the long wake of a history of slavery, brutality, and struggling for freedoms bodily and psychological.” —Carl Phillips, from the Foreword The 115th volume of the Yale Series of Younger Poets, What Noise Against the Cane is a lyric quest for belonging and freedom, weaving political resistance, Caribbean folklore, immigration, and the realities of Black life in America. Desiree C. Bailey begins by reworking the epic in an oceanic narrative of bondage and liberation in the midst of the Haitian Revolution. The poems move into the contemporary Black diaspora, probing the mythologies of home, belief, nation, and womanhood. Series judge Carl Phillips observes that Bailey’s “poems argue for hope and faith equally. . . . These are powerful poems, indeed, and they make a persuasive argument for the transformative powers of steady defiance.”
Ghost Letters
Title | Ghost Letters PDF eBook |
Author | Baba Badji |
Publisher | Parlor Press LLC |
Pages | 106 |
Release | 2021-01-01 |
Genre | Poetry |
ISBN | 1643171984 |
In Ghost Letters, one emigrates to America again, and again, and again, though one also never leaves Senegal, the country of one’s birth; one grows up in America, and attends university in America, though one also never leaves Senegal, the country of one’s birth; one wrestles with one’s American blackness in ways not possible in Senegal, though one never leaves Senegal, the country of one’s birth; and one sees more deeply into Americanness than any native-born American could. Ghost Letters is a 21st century Notebook of a Return to the Native Land, though it is a notebook of arrival and being in America. It is a major achievement. —Shane McCrae