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Sing with the Heart of a Bear
A01=Kenneth Lincoln
american indian
american literature
american poetry
american verse
Author_Kenneth Lincoln
bible
biblical
Category=DSBF
Category=DSC
contemporary poetry
culture
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eq_biography-true-stories
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ethnicity
ethnopoetics
free verse
gender
gender studies
greenwich village
indigenous
indigenous people
lakota
literary analysis
literary criticism
lost garden
modernist
mythology
native american
native american literature
native literature
new world
poetic criticism
poetic verse
poetry analysis
poetry studies
renaissance
spirituality
translation
Product details
- ISBN 9780520218901
- Weight: 726g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 13 Dec 1999
- Publisher: University of California Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Examining contemporary poetry by way of ethnicity and gender, Kenneth Lincoln tracks the Renaissance invention of the Wild Man and the recurrent Adamic myth of the lost Garden. He discusses the first anthology of American Indian verse, "The Path on the Rainbow" (1918), which opened Jorge Luis Borges' university surveys of American literature, to thirty-five contemporary Indian poets who speak to, with, and against American mainstream bards. From Whitman's free verse, through the Greenwich Village Renaissance (sandwiched between the world wars) and the post-apocalyptic Beat incantations, to transglobal questions of tribe and verse at the century's close, Lincoln shows where we mine the mother lode of New World voices, what distinguishes American verse, which tales our poets sing and what inflections we hear in the rhythms, pitches, and parsings of native lines. Lincoln presents the Lakota concept of 'singing with the heart of a bear' as poetry which moves through an artist.
He argues for a fusion of estranged cultures, tribal and emigre, margin and mainstream, in detailing the ethnopoetics of Native American translation and the growing modernist concern for a 'native' sense of the 'makings' of American verse. This fascinating work represents a major new effort in understanding American and Native American literature, spirituality, and culture.
Kenneth Lincoln is Professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author of A Writer's China (1999), Men Down West (1997), Indi'n Humor (1993), The Good Red Road: Passages into Native America (1987), and Native American Renaissance (1983).
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