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Poetry Circuit
Poetry Circuit
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€125.99
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A01=Peter B. Howarth
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Author_Peter B. Howarth
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DSA
Category=DSBH
Category=DSC
COP=United Kingdom
Delivery_Pre-order
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Language_English
PA=Not yet available
Price_€100 and above
PS=Forthcoming
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Product details
- ISBN 9780192896940
- Weight: 740g
- Dimensions: 166 x 242mm
- Publication Date: 19 Sep 2024
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
Live performance has changed poetry more than anything else in the last hundred years: it has given poets new audiences and a new economy, and it has generated new styles, from Imagism, to confessional, to contemporary Spoken Word. But the creative impact that public reading had right through the twentieth century has not been well understood. Mixing close listening to archive performances with intimate histories of modernist venues and promotors, The Poetry Circuit tells the story of how poets met their audience again, and how the feedback loops between their voices, the venues, and the occasions turned poems into running dramas between poet and listener. A nervous T. S. Eliot reveals himself to be anything but impersonal, while Marianne Moore's accident-prone readings become subtle ways of keeping her poems in constant re-draft. Robert Frost used his poems to spar with his fans and rivals, while Langston Hughes wrote Ask Your Mama to expose the prejudice circulating in the room as he spoke it. The Poetry Circuit also shows how the post-war reading boom made new kinds of poetry involving their audience and setting in the performance, such as John Ashbery's anti-charismatic Poets' Theatre, Amiri Baraka's documentary soundtracks of the streets, or the confessional readings of Allen Ginsberg, which shame the listeners more than the poet. Covering the first seventy years of the poetry reading, The Poetry Circuit demonstrates that there never were 'page' and 'stage' poets: the reading simply changed what every modern poet could do.
Peter Howarth teaches at Queen Mary, University of London. He is the author of British Poetry in the Age of Modernism (2006), The Cambridge Introduction to Modernist Poetry (2011), and co-editor of The Cambridge Companion to the Sonnet (2012). A National Teaching Fellow, he is a frequent contributor to the London Review of Books. He is currently an AHRC RDE Fellow researching the history and practice of festivals.
Poetry Circuit
€125.99
