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Rich Murphy's Practitioner Joy is the poet's confrontation with his practice as a poet and, at least in part, his inevitable death. When outside Plato's Cave, capitalism's crisis horizon threatens with precarious neoliberalism, Wendy Brown's "every conduct is economic conduct," cyber algorithms and Shoshana Zuboff's "I once was mine; now I am theirs," and Yuval Noah Harari's and Stephen Hawking's "Homo Deus" (a new species of humans from the loins of the wealthy only), prophetic voices are needed in an effort to counter and perhaps change the narrative's and the future's direction. This…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Rich Murphy's Practitioner Joy is the poet's confrontation with his practice as a poet and, at least in part, his inevitable death. When outside Plato's Cave, capitalism's crisis horizon threatens with precarious neoliberalism, Wendy Brown's "every conduct is economic conduct," cyber algorithms and Shoshana Zuboff's "I once was mine; now I am theirs," and Yuval Noah Harari's and Stephen Hawking's "Homo Deus" (a new species of humans from the loins of the wealthy only), prophetic voices are needed in an effort to counter and perhaps change the narrative's and the future's direction. This collection of poems attempts to do just that. It is an alternative voice offering a way forward.
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Autorenporträt
Rich Murphy is a poet and author whose poetry has recently appeared in North Dakota Quarterly, Calameo (Mexico), Experiential-Experimental-Literature (Ukraine), Terror House Magazine (Hungary) , Otoliths (Australia), Die Leere Mitte (Germany), Bangalore Review (India), Lit. 202 (England), Neologism Poetry Journal, Word for / Word, West Texas Literary Review, New Note Poetry Journal, Grey Sparrow, Chiron Review, Flatbush Review, and Fractured Ecologies (anthology, Denmark). Prophet Voice Now, his book-length collection of essays on poetry and poetics, was a finalist in the book contest at Common Ground Research Network and published in June 2020.