The San Francisco Renaissance: Poetics and Community at Mid-CenturyCambridge University Press, 28.06.1991 - 268 Seiten Though the term "San Francisco Renaissance" is usually associated with the Beat movement, it was in reality a collage of different communities, often at odds with one another, whose agendas were social and political as much as aesthetic. These subcommunities provided important contexts for subsequent counterculture developments such as gay liberation, feminism, and the New Left long before those movements attracted widespread public attention. In his study of these various impulses Michael Davidson devotes chapters to central figures such as Kenneth Rexroth, Robert Duncan, William Everson, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, Michael McClure, Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen, and Jack Spicer. He also examines the important but largely neglected context of women writers in a period dominated by misogynistic views. His final chapter brings things up to date by looking at developments in the Bay Area since the death of Jack Spicer. |
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Seite xiv
... Everson's celebration of the bardic tradition . At the same time , many who referred to the period as the San Francisco Renaissance recognized the absurdity of an event based on something that had already happened . For the American ...
... Everson's celebration of the bardic tradition . At the same time , many who referred to the period as the San Francisco Renaissance recognized the absurdity of an event based on something that had already happened . For the American ...
Seite 7
... Everson's sacramental nature poems . For Robert Duncan , the city is seen through a golden mist , " ... the westward edge of dreams , the golden promise of our days . " 14 And for Kenneth Rexroth , the city is a teeming international ...
... Everson's sacramental nature poems . For Robert Duncan , the city is seen through a golden mist , " ... the westward edge of dreams , the golden promise of our days . " 14 And for Kenneth Rexroth , the city is a teeming international ...
Seite 9
... of a regional impulse that has always marked California writing . This im- pulse was fulfilled in later poets like Robinson Jeffers , Gary Snyder , and William Everson , who drew , if not on the INTRODUCTION : ENABLING FICTIONS 9.
... of a regional impulse that has always marked California writing . This im- pulse was fulfilled in later poets like Robinson Jeffers , Gary Snyder , and William Everson , who drew , if not on the INTRODUCTION : ENABLING FICTIONS 9.
Seite 10
... Everson has been the most devout chronicler of this heritage , seeing in the limitations of a writer like Miller the ... Everson's Jungian perspective tends to ignore the historical specificity of the individual writer in favor of an ...
... Everson has been the most devout chronicler of this heritage , seeing in the limitations of a writer like Miller the ... Everson's Jungian perspective tends to ignore the historical specificity of the individual writer in favor of an ...
Seite 11
... Everson discussed this very prob- lem and made reference to the important role of California's early bohemia in creating their own sense of place . To Duncan , California represents a long history of alternative religions , from Indian ...
... Everson discussed this very prob- lem and made reference to the important role of California's early bohemia in creating their own sense of place . To Duncan , California represents a long history of alternative religions , from Indian ...
Inhalt
The Elegiac Mode Rhetoric and Poetics in the 1940s | 33 |
The Darkness Surrounds Us Participation and Reflection among the Beat Writers | 60 |
Spotting That Design Incarnation and Interpretation in Gary Snyder and Philip Whalen | 95 |
Cave of Resemblances Cave of Rimes Tradition and Repetition in Robert Duncan | 125 |
The City Redefined Community and Dialogue in Jack Spicer | 150 |
Appropriations Women and the San Francisco Renaissance | 172 |
Approaching the Fin de Siècle | 200 |
Notes | 219 |
243 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
The San Francisco Renaissance: Poetics and Community at Mid-century Michael Davidson Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1989 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aesthetic Allen Ginsberg Altieri American Poetry attempt Bay Area Beat becomes Berkeley bohemian Calif California Chronicle circle contemporary create Creeley critical cultural described dream Duluoz early elegiac essay feminist Ferlinghetti Gary Snyder Hass Hejinian Helen Adam homosexual Howl human incarnation individual Jack Kerouac Jack Spicer Joanne Kyger Judy Grahn Kenneth Rexroth kind landscape language linguistic literary literature living lyric male Michael McClure mode modern modernist Mountain movement myth narrative nature North Beach novel Olson participation period Philip Whalen play poem's poet's poetics political postmodern reflected represents rhetoric Rime Robert Duncan Robin Blaser role romantic San Francisco poets San Francisco Renaissance scene sense sexual social songs specific speech spirit story structure things tion tradition transformation University Press Venice Poem Visions of Cody voice Whitman William Everson woman women words writing York