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Disappearing Ink: Poetry at the End of Print Culture
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Gioia, Dana (Author)
Title
Disappearing Ink: Poetry at the End of Print Culture
Abstract
The Celebrated poet and author of Can Poetry Matter?offers another bold, insightful collection of essays on literature's changing place in contemporary culturePoetry is an art that preceded writing, and it will survive television and video games . . . The problem won't be finding an audience. The challenge will be writing well enough to deserve one. In Disappearing Ink, Dana Gioia stakes the claim for poetry's place amid American popular culture, where poetry in its latest oral forms -rap, slam, performance-is transforming the traditional literary culture of the printed page. But, as the seminal title essay asks, "What is a conscientious critic supposed to do with an Eminem or Jay-Z?" In a brilliant array of essays that test the pulse of traditional and contemporary poetry, Gioia ponders the future of the written word and how it might find its most relevant incarnation. With the clarity, wit, and feisty intelligence that made Can Poetry Matter? one of the most important and controversial books about literature and contemporary American society, Gioia again demonstrates his unique abilities of observation and uncanny prognostication to examine our complicated everyday relationship to art.
Dana Gioia offers insightful essays on literature's changing place in contemporary culture in this new collection." "What happens to poetry in a culture that no longer depends on books? Dana Gioia dismisses the standard cliches about poetry's precarious place in a society transformed by electronic media. Looking at both the literary world and popular entertainment, Gioia's original title essay offers an account of how new technologies and innovative forms of oral poetry - rap, slam, spoken work, performance art - are revitalizing the art in unexpected ways.
I. Disappearing Ink
Disappearing Ink: Poetry at the End of Print Culture
The Hand of the Poet: The Magical Value of Manuscripts
Longfellow in the Aftermath of Modernism
II. West Coast Elegies
Fallen Western Star: The Decline of San Francisco as a Literary Region
Rexroth Rediscovered
Brother Beat
Jack Spicer and San Francisco’s Lost Bohemia
John Haines
Discovering Kay Ryan
The Cult of Weldon Kees
On Being a California Poet
III. “All I Have is a Voice”
“All I Have is a Voice”: September 11th and American Poetry
Two Views of Robert Frost
—The Life
—The Poetry
Elizabeth Bishop: From Coterie to Canon
Barbara Howes and the Eminent Sorority
The Journey of William Jay Smith
Short Views
—Donald Hall
—Philip Levine
—Peter Davison
—Randall Jarrell
—Janet Lewis
—Samuel Menashe
—Donald Justice
James Tate and American Surrealism
What is Italian American Poetry?
“Connect the Prose and the Passion”
Publisher
Graywolf Press
Date
2004-10
# of Pages
294
Language
en
ISBN
978-1-55597-410-7
Short Title
Disappearing Ink
Library Catalog
Google Books
Extra
Google-Books-ID: _XSFAAAAIAAJ
Link
Notes
Citation
GIOIA, Dana, 2004. Disappearing Ink: Poetry at the End of Print Culture. Graywolf Press. ISBN 978-1-55597-410-7.
Focus
Geocultural Space
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