Unplanned Cities in Modern American Poetry

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A01=Daniela Kukrechtova
African American literature
american literature
Author_Daniela Kukrechtova
black literature
Category=DSBH
Category=DSC
Category=NHTB
city
environment
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Frank O'Hara
gender
geography
Gwendolen Brooks
Hart Crane
history
Jean Toomer
lyrical representation
mapping
materiality
middle-class
migration
modernism
poets
policy
respectability
rural
space
spatial theory
technology
urban literature
urban planning
William Carlos Williams

Product details

  • ISBN 9798765129159
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 232mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Reveals how five modern American poets challenged prevailing discourses about urbanization through lyrical representations of cities and the diverse people who lived in them.

In early 20th-century America, industrialization and the influx of immigrants and rural migrants into urban centers fostered a certain representation of and distaste for cities and their inhabitants. The dominant discourse was one of containment through utopian planning and violent reshaping, often reflected in both policy-making and writings about cities during this time. Yet as Daniela Kukrechtová identifies, urban literature also reveals voices that challenged that narrative.

Unplanned Cities in Modern American Poetry shows how the formally innovative works of five poets – Jean Toomer, William Carlos Williams, Hart Crane, Frank O'Hara, and Gwendolyn Brooks – worked against anti-urban discourse. Their works displayed a love for disorderly cityscapes and the actual urbanites who inhabit them, promoting the radical idea that cities were for people while revealing the extreme dystopian/utopian discourses that helped create and maintain divisions and disparities.

Kukrechtová argues that, besides offering a radical critique, these poets also used their poetry to imagine the mental and emotional attitudes of urban dwellers toward their environment. She therefore offers the urban ecocritical approach often missing in literary analyses of modern American poetry. Simultaneously, the lyrical and socially-engaged imagination in these works – that is, the human implications of various plans, designs, and policies that helped create the modern American city – represent a voice often unheard in urban studies and its history.

Daniela Kukrechtová is a Visiting Assistant Professor at College of the Holy Cross, USA. She has taught literature and poetry at Brandeis University, Emerson College, and College of the Holy Cross, and her research interests focus on modern and contemporary American poetry, urban ecology and ecocriticism, African American literature, and the literature of exile. She has published in African American Review, the CEA Critic, Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal, and The Worcester Review. Her creative work (poetry, translations, and nonfiction) has appeared in The Sunlight Press, Circumference: Poetry in Translation, Persephone’s Daughters, Indiana Review and Nowhere Magazine.

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