Forms of a World: Contemporary Poetry and the Making of Globalization

Forms of a World: Contemporary Poetry and the Making of Globalization

by Walt Hunter
Forms of a World: Contemporary Poetry and the Making of Globalization

Forms of a World: Contemporary Poetry and the Making of Globalization

by Walt Hunter

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Overview

What happens when we think of poetry as a global literary form, while also thinking the global in poetic terms? Forms of a World shows how the innovations of contemporary poetics have been forged through the transformations of globalization across five decades. Sensing the changes wrought by neoliberalism before they are made fully present, poets from around the world have creatively intervened in global processes by remaking poetry’s formal repertoire. In experimental reinventions of the ballad, the prospect poem, and the ode, Hunter excavates a new, globalized interpretation of the ethical and political relevance of forms.

Forms of a World contends that poetry’s role is not only to make visible thematically the violence of global dispossessions, but to renew performatively the missing conditions for intervening within these processes. Poetic acts—the rhetoric of possessing, belonging, exhorting, and prospecting—address contemporary conditions that render social life ever more precarious. Examining an eclectic group of Anglophone poets, from Seamus Heaney and Claudia Rankine to Natasha Trethewey and Kofi Awoonor, Hunter elaborates the range of ways that contemporary poets exhort us to imagine forms of social life and enable political intervention unique to but beyond the horizon of the contemporary global situation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780823282210
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 01/08/2019
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Walt Hunter is Associate Professor of World Literature at Clemson University. He is co-translator of Frédéric Neyrat’s Atopias: Manifesto for a Radical Existentialism.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

1. Stolen Landscapes: The Investments of the Ode and the Politics of Land 19

2. Let Us Go: Lyric and the Transit of Citizenship 44

3. The Crowd to Come: Poetic Exhortations from Brooklyn to Kashmir 65

4. The No-Prospect Poem: Poetic Views of the Anthropocene 90

Coda 119

Acknowledgments 129

Notes 133

Bibliography 165

Index 183

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