by Daniel Silliman Fiction
Nixon went down to the beach and sat in the sand and waited. The waves came in, the waves went out, and he sat there in his suit and waited.
Tagged as: All the King’s Men, calvinist doctrine, election day, Huey P. Long, literary theory, presentism, providentialism, Richard Nixon, Robert Penn Warren, secular Calvinism, theories of history
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by Brooks Lampe Academia
Even though both the form and content of Gene Tanta’s work are particular to his Romanian-immigrant experience, he insists that his poetry is accessible to everyone. His poetry, he says, exists both as aesthetic objects and political propaganda. This is absolutely true about all poetry, not just his own. Inevitably, literary criticism will come to see that literature is always both.
Tagged as: aesthetics, american immigrant experience, Bloom, book of poems, collective memories, collective unconscious, contemporary poetry, cultural memory, Deep Image, Eliot, ESL, ESL poetry, Harold Bloom, image poetry, Imagism, immigrant, jungian, Marxism, modern poetry, reader-response, Romania, romanians, second language poetry, Simic, surrealism, Tanta, theory
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