Amiri Baraka Edward Dorn
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Author | : Amiri Baraka |
Publisher | : University of New Mexico Press |
Total Pages | : 248 |
Release | : 2013 |
Genre | : Authors, American |
ISBN | : 0826353916 |
The letters of Amiri Baraka and Edward Dorn offer a vivid picture of American lives connecting around poetry during a tumultuous time of change and immense creativity.
Author | : Amiri Baraka |
Publisher | : University of New Mexico Press |
Total Pages | : 248 |
Release | : 2013 |
Genre | : Authors, American |
ISBN | : 0826353916 |
The letters of Amiri Baraka and Edward Dorn offer a vivid picture of American lives connecting around poetry during a tumultuous time of change and immense creativity.
Author | : Claudia Moreno Pisano |
Publisher | : UNM Press |
Total Pages | : 250 |
Release | : 2013-12-01 |
Genre | : Literary Collections |
ISBN | : 0826353924 |
From the end of the 1950s through the middle of the 1960s, Amiri Baraka (b. 1934) and Edward Dorn (1929–99), two self-consciously avant-garde poets, fostered an intense friendship primarily through correspondence. The early 1960s found both poets just beginning to publish and becoming public figures. Bonding around their commitment to new and radical forms of poetry and culture, Dorn and Baraka created an interracial friendship at precisely the moment when the Civil Rights Movement was becoming a powerful force in national politics. The major premise of the Dorn-Jones friendship as developed through their letters was artistic, but the range of subjects in the correspondence shows an incredible intersection between the personal and the public, providing a schematic map of what was so vital in postwar American culture to those living through it. Their letters offer a vivid picture of American lives connecting around poetry during a tumultuous time of change and immense creativity. Reading through these correspondences allows access into personal biographies, and through these biographies, profound moments in American cultural history open themselves to us in a way not easily found in official channels of historical narrative and memory.
Author | : Edward Dorn |
Publisher | : Duke University Press |
Total Pages | : 232 |
Release | : 1989 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 9780822309321 |
Dorn's high-spirited, crazy-quilt, complex anti-epic is a masterful critique of late twentieth-century capitalism and is one of the great comic poems of American literature. Dorn is one of the few political poets in America; this fantasy about a demigod cowboy, a saloon madam, and a talking horse named Claude Levi-Strauss, who travel the Southwest in search of Howard Hughes, as become a minor classic.
Author | : Edward Dorn |
Publisher | : University of Michigan Press |
Total Pages | : 188 |
Release | : 2007 |
Genre | : American poetry |
ISBN | : 9780472068623 |
Collects the commentary of the later years and last days of one of America's most powerful and unique poets
Author | : Ammiel Alcalay |
Publisher | : RE: Public / Upset Press |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 2013 |
Genre | : Literary Collections |
ISBN | : 9780976014287 |
Set against the backdrop of the Cold War, the war in Iraq, and 9/11, A Little History explores the deep politics of memory and imagination while proposing a new paradigm for American Studies. With a preface by editor Fred Dewey, Alcalay's book places the work of major figures like Muriel Rukeyser, Charles Olson, Edward Dorn, Diane di Prima, and Amiri Baraka, in the realm of resistance and global decolonization to assert the power of poetry as a unique form of knowledge.
Author | : Edward Dorn |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 72 |
Release | : 1967 |
Genre | : American poetry |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Donald Allen |
Publisher | : Grove Press |
Total Pages | : 452 |
Release | : 1982 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9780802150356 |
This anthology includes many of the major poets to have emerged and gained pre-eminence since World War II, and whose writing reflects not only the significant changes in this nation's postwar history, and the coming to grips with a nuclear age, but also an entirely new way of looking at and structuring reality. United by their "postmodernist" concerns with spontaneity, "instantism," formal and syntactic flexibility, and the revelation of both the creator and the process through the writing itself, these 38 poets represent very diverse strains of an essential American individualism. Included are many of the poets whose work first gained widespread national attention with the 1960 publication of The New American Poetry: Charles Olson, Allen Ginsberg, Paul Blackburn, LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka), Denise Levertov, Robert Duncan, and others. Among the poets included here for the first time are Anne Waldman, Diane di Prima, Ed Sanders, Jerome Rothenberg, and James Koller. In addition to a new preface by Allen and Butterick, the book provides autobiographical notes of all the poets and listings of their major works.
Author | : Edward Dorn |
Publisher | : University of New Mexico Press |
Total Pages | : 236 |
Release | : 2013 |
Genre | : Photography |
ISBN | : 0826353819 |
" A path-breaking photo narrative of Dorn and African-American photographer Leroy Lucas's mid-1960s travels through Shoshoni Indian country (Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, and Utah) to paint a stark tableau of modern Native life"--
Author | : J. J. Phillips |
Publisher | : W. W. Norton |
Total Pages | : 429 |
Release | : 1992 |
Genre | : Poetry |
ISBN | : 9780393030563 |
Collects the poetry from the last decade of American Book Awards that best reflects the multicultural interests and accomplishments in American literature