Have women finally moved beyond the status of cultural outsiders to become full participants in American poetry and its criticism? In By Herself: Women Reclaim Poetry - edited by Molly McQuade - contemporary women poets reconsider their art form on their own terms, and the results are both telling and fascinating. This lively and richly varied collection offers more than two dozen essays that are uniformly original, challenging, playful, and ruthlessly individualistic.
Have women finally moved beyond the status of cultural outsiders to become full participants in American poetry and its criticism? In By Herself: Women Reclaim Poetry - edited by Molly McQuade - contemporary women poets reconsider their art form on their own terms, and the results are both telling and fascinating. This lively and richly varied collection offers more than two dozen essays that are uniformly original, challenging, playful, and ruthlessly individualistic.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Introduction, Molly McQuade "It's a Woman's Prerogative to Change Her Mind," Elizabeth Macklin I. Writing Their Lives Vesuvius Home: The Power of Emily Dickinson, Adrienne Rich The Difficult Miracle of Black Poetry in America or Something Like a Sonnet for Phillis Wheatley, June Jordan Being a Dragon, Cynthia Zarin My Plath Problem, April Bernard "Either I'm Nobody, or I'm a Nation, Rita Dove Edwin Muir and the Primal World, Mary Kinzie II. A Poet's Tools: "The Incredible Difficulty of Saying Something True" A Mediation on a Metaphor, Alicia Ostriker Some Notes on Silence, Jorie Graham A Cadenced Privacy, Brenda Hillman Use This Word in a Sentence: Experimental, Ann Lauterbach Myself a Kangaroo Among the Beauties, Lucie Brock-Broido A Genuine Article, Heather McHugh III. Critical Panoramas Confessions of a Postmodern Poetess, Annie Finch Playing the Changes, Eleanor Wilner La Faustienne, Lyn Hejinian Xio's Soakbook: Criticism Takes a Path, S.X. Rosenstock Against Decoration, Mary Karr Poetry, Mattering?, Susan Wheeler IV. Reading Her Mind: Creeds and Memoirs Letter to a Young Woman Poet, Eavan Boland A Student's Memoir of Muriel Rukeyser, Sharon Olds Poetry Is Not a Luxury, Audre Lorde Meditations on "Mecca": Gwendolyn Brooks and the Responsibilities of the Black Poet, Elizabeth Alexander 69 Hidebound Opinions, Propositions, and Several Asides from a Manila Folder Concerning the Stuff of Poetry, C.D. Wright Short Survey of Scruples, Molly McQuade On Being Unable to Read, Valerie Cornell Acknowledgements
Introduction, Molly McQuade "It's a Woman's Prerogative to Change Her Mind," Elizabeth Macklin I. Writing Their Lives Vesuvius Home: The Power of Emily Dickinson, Adrienne Rich The Difficult Miracle of Black Poetry in America or Something Like a Sonnet for Phillis Wheatley, June Jordan Being a Dragon, Cynthia Zarin My Plath Problem, April Bernard "Either I'm Nobody, or I'm a Nation, Rita Dove Edwin Muir and the Primal World, Mary Kinzie II. A Poet's Tools: "The Incredible Difficulty of Saying Something True" A Mediation on a Metaphor, Alicia Ostriker Some Notes on Silence, Jorie Graham A Cadenced Privacy, Brenda Hillman Use This Word in a Sentence: Experimental, Ann Lauterbach Myself a Kangaroo Among the Beauties, Lucie Brock-Broido A Genuine Article, Heather McHugh III. Critical Panoramas Confessions of a Postmodern Poetess, Annie Finch Playing the Changes, Eleanor Wilner La Faustienne, Lyn Hejinian Xio's Soakbook: Criticism Takes a Path, S.X. Rosenstock Against Decoration, Mary Karr Poetry, Mattering?, Susan Wheeler IV. Reading Her Mind: Creeds and Memoirs Letter to a Young Woman Poet, Eavan Boland A Student's Memoir of Muriel Rukeyser, Sharon Olds Poetry Is Not a Luxury, Audre Lorde Meditations on "Mecca": Gwendolyn Brooks and the Responsibilities of the Black Poet, Elizabeth Alexander 69 Hidebound Opinions, Propositions, and Several Asides from a Manila Folder Concerning the Stuff of Poetry, C.D. Wright Short Survey of Scruples, Molly McQuade On Being Unable to Read, Valerie Cornell Acknowledgements
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