BOOKS - The Poetry of the Americas: From Good Neighbors to Countercultures (Modernist...
The Poetry of the Americas: From Good Neighbors to Countercultures (Modernist Literature and Culture) - Harris Feinsod October 9, 2017 PDF  BOOKS
US $6.76

Views
772777
The Poetry of the Americas: From Good Neighbors to Countercultures (Modernist Literature and Culture)
Author: Harris Feinsod
Year: October 9, 2017
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 12 MB
Language: English

The Poetry of the Americas offers a lively and detailed history of relations among poets in the US and Latin America, spanning three decades from the Good Neighbor diplomacy of World War II through the Cold War cultural policies of the late 1960s. Connecting works by Martin Adan, Elizabeth Bishop, Paul Blackburn, Jorge Luis Borges, Julia de Burgos, Ernesto Cardenal, Jorge Carrera Andrade, Allen Ginsberg, Langston Hughes, Jose Lezama Lima, Pablo Neruda, Charles Olson, Octavio Paz, Heberto Padilla, Wallace Stevens, Derek Walcott, William Carlos Williams, and many others, Feinsod reveals how poets of many nations imagined a and "poetry of the Americas and " that linked multiple cultures, even as it reflected the inequities of the inter-American political system. This account offers a rich contextual study of the state-sponsored institutions and the countercultural networks that sustained this poetry, from Nelson Rockefeller's Office of the Coordinator for Inter-American Affairs to themid-1960s avant-garde scene in Mexico City. This innovative literary-historical project enables new readings of such canonical poems as Stevens's and "Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction and " and Neruda's and "The Heights of Macchu Picchu, and " but it positions these alongside lesser known poetry, translations, anthologies, literary journals and private correspondences culled from library archives across the Americas. The Poetry of the Americas thus broadens the horizons of reception and mutual influence - and of formal, historical, and political possibility - through which we encounter midcentury American poetry, recasting traditional categories of and "U.S. and " or and "Latin American and " literature within a truly hemispheric vision.

You may also be interested in: