Home > Binding > Paperback >

Democracy, Culture and the Voice of Poetry (The University Center for Human Values Series)

Democracy, Culture and the Voice of Poetry (The University Center for Human Values Series) Robert Pinsky 0691122636 9780691122632 Pinskys conception of the poet as citizen--not legislator, but something between town crier, parson,
Stock Image - Actual Cover May Vary


 

Our Price: $5.04

Quantity:40

 
ISBN: 0691122636


Condition:
New [Add $99.00]
Like-New [Add $0.60]
Very-Good [Add $0.40]
Good [Add $0.20]
Acceptable

Quantity:  
Description
 

Pinskys conception of the poet as citizen--not legislator, but something between town crier, parson, and fool on the hill--gives us hope that the cultivation of a shared memory will, in time, make us a people--Jonathan Galassi Pinskys startlingly original thesis--that democracys contradictory drive toward monadic individualism and mass conformity is echoed, and resolved, in the parallel tension between the solitary practice of poetry and the collective invocation of its voice--is itself a cultural event of major significance. In showing how poetry, by its mimetic embodiment, artfully resists and engages our demotic cultural dilemma, he sharply defines the moral and social place of poetry for our times. His model of internal cultural analysis will inform and delight both poet and reader, humanists as well as social scientists. This is perhaps the most important discourse on cultural analysis by a major poet since EliotsNotes Towards the Definition of Culture.--Orlando Patterson, Harvard University Robert Pinsky has produced a fine, lean book on a very large topic. With fresh and compelling arguments, Pinsky writes that poetry has a significant role to play in a mass-democracy, that American poetry has produced extraordinary art, and that this genre has truly engaged with the challenge to traditional art forms raised by democratic revolutions.--Robert von Hallberg, University of Chicago An important contribution to our thinking about the place of poetry in American life. No one could be more qualified to speak on this subject than Robert Pinsky, who combines extraordinary gifts as a poet, critic, and public ambassador for the art. The book is full of provocative thought and sharp observations about poems and responses to poetry.--Paul Breslin, Northwestern University

Author: Robert Pinsky

Language: English

Binding: Paperback

Pages: 112

Publisher: Princeton University Press

Publication Date: 2005-03-06


Share your shopping experience. Write a review here »

Browse for more products in the same category as this item:

Binding > Paperback