Songs of Ourselves: The Uses of Poetry in America

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Harvard University Press, 01.07.2009 - 488 Seiten

Listen to a short interview with Joan Shelley RubinHost: Chris Gondek | Producer: Heron & Crane

In the years between 1880 and 1950, Americans recited poetry at family gatherings, school assemblies, church services, camp outings, and civic affairs. As they did so, they invested poems--and the figure of the poet--with the beliefs, values, and emotions that they experienced in those settings.

Reciting a poem together with others joined the individual to the community in a special and memorable way. In a strikingly original and rich portrait of the uses of verse in America, Joan Shelley Rubin shows how the sites and practices of reciting poetry influenced readers' lives and helped them to find meaning in a poet's words.

Emphasizing the cultural circumstances that influenced the production and reception of poets and poetry in this country, Rubin recovers the experiences of ordinary people reading poems in public places. We see the recent immigrant seeking acceptance, the schoolchild eager to be integrated into the class, the mourner sharing grief at a funeral, the grandparent trying to bridge the generation gap--all instances of readers remaking texts to meet social and personal needs. Preserving the moral, romantic, and sentimental legacies of the nineteenth century, the act of reading poems offered cultural continuity, spiritual comfort, and pleasure.

Songs of Ourselves is a unique history of literary texts as lived experience. By blurring the boundaries between "high" and "popular" poetry as well as between modern and traditional, it creates a fuller, more democratic way of studying our poetic language and ourselves.

 

Inhalt

Seer and Sage
19
Amateur and Professional
25
Absence and Presence
34
Sophisticate and Innocent
53
Celebrity and Cipher
75
Alien and Intimate
92
Listen My Children Modes of Poetry Reading in American Schools
107
I Am an American Poetry and Civic Ideals
165
Grow Old Along with Me Poetry and Emotions among Family and Friends
242
Gods in His Heaven Religious Uses of Verse
287
Lovely as a Tree Reading and Seeing OutofDoors
336
Favorite Poems and Contemporary Readers
381
Notes
407
Index
451
Urheberrecht

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Beliebte Passagen

Seite 1 - Thou'rt gone, the abyss of heaven Hath swallowed up thy form ; yet on my heart Deeply hath sunk the lesson thou hast given, And shall not soon depart. He who from zone to zone Guides through the boundless sky thy certain flight, In the long way that I must tread alone, Will lead my Steps aright.
Seite 26 - I was beginning to speak of the famous poets I knew when Garfield stopped me with "Just a minute!" He ran down into the grassy space, first to one fence and then to the other at the sides, and waved a wild arm of invitation to the neighbors who were also sitting on their back porches. "Come over here!" he shouted. "He's telling about Holmes, and Longfellow, and Lowell, and Whittier!

Autoren-Profil (2009)

Joan Shelley Rubin is Professor of History at the University of Rochester.

Bibliografische Informationen