Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to American Poetry and Politics since 1900
- The Cambridge Companion to American Poetry and Politics since 1900
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Space of Public Memory
- Chapter 2 Poetry and Propaganda
- Chapter 3 Depression-Era Poetics and the Politics of How to Read
- Chapter 4 The Politics and Poetics of Revolution
- Chapter 5 Wallace Stevens, Stanley Burnshaw, and the Defense of Poetry in an Age of Economic Determinism
- Chapter 6 The Line of Wit
- Chapter 7 US Poets on War and Peace
- Chapter 8 Institutions of American Poetry
- Chapter 9 African American Political Poetries
- Chapter 10 Our Terribly Excluded Blue
- Chapter 11 Poetry and the Prison Industrial Complex
- Chapter 12 “Oh Say Can You See”
- Chapter 13 The Political Resonances of Hip Hop and Spoken Word
- Chapter 14 Language as Politics in Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century American Poetry
- Chapter 15 Renovating the Open Field
- Chapter 16 Transcultural Agency
- Chapter 17 Ecopoetry Now
- Chapter 18 The Politics and History of Digital Poetics
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to …
- References
Chapter 15 - Renovating the Open Field
Innovative Women Poets Reclaiming an Erasure History
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 April 2023
- The Cambridge Companion to American Poetry and Politics since 1900
- The Cambridge Companion to American Poetry and Politics since 1900
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Space of Public Memory
- Chapter 2 Poetry and Propaganda
- Chapter 3 Depression-Era Poetics and the Politics of How to Read
- Chapter 4 The Politics and Poetics of Revolution
- Chapter 5 Wallace Stevens, Stanley Burnshaw, and the Defense of Poetry in an Age of Economic Determinism
- Chapter 6 The Line of Wit
- Chapter 7 US Poets on War and Peace
- Chapter 8 Institutions of American Poetry
- Chapter 9 African American Political Poetries
- Chapter 10 Our Terribly Excluded Blue
- Chapter 11 Poetry and the Prison Industrial Complex
- Chapter 12 “Oh Say Can You See”
- Chapter 13 The Political Resonances of Hip Hop and Spoken Word
- Chapter 14 Language as Politics in Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century American Poetry
- Chapter 15 Renovating the Open Field
- Chapter 16 Transcultural Agency
- Chapter 17 Ecopoetry Now
- Chapter 18 The Politics and History of Digital Poetics
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to …
- References
Summary
Florence Howe’s 1993 revised and expanded poetry anthology No More Masks!: An Anthology of Twentieth-Century American Women Poets continues the work of the first edition, with poet Muriel Rukeyser’s The Poem as Mask providing the “vision” for the collection, as Howe notes the “fragments and the invisibility that control women’s lives [to], at last, come to wholeness and vision” (F. Howe xxix). Howe’s new edition responded to “new differences [that] now divide women’s poetic consciousness” and considered that “to be a woman poet is to encompass,” after Adrienne Rich, “the difficult world” (xxix, xxxi). The volume illustrates the collection’s purpose with Rukeyser’s starting poem where she identifies a mask worn by women that once concealed the individual, the self “unable to speak, in exile from myself” (xxvii). The Poem as Mask – focusing on the mythology of Orpheus – calls for “No more masks! No more mythologies!” to put an end to the masking through myths imposed on women writers and to signal a move toward new mythologies that emerge from the women’s self, an identity once split that finds its oneness.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023