Du Bois's Telegram: Literary Resistance and State Containment

Juliana Spahr
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Du Bois's Telegram: Literary Resistance and State Containment

Juliana Spahr
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Overview

256 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Oct 23, 2018
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 256
  • Publisher: WW Norton
  • ISBN: 9780674986961
  • Dimensions: 1.0" W x 1.0" L x 1.0" H
Juliana Spahr is Professor of English at Mills College. She is the author of eight volumes of poetry, including The Winter the Wolf Came, Well Then There Now, and Response, winner of the National Poetry Series Award. She is also the editor, with Claudia Rankine, of American Women Poets in the 21st Century and received the O. B. Hardison Jr. Poetry Prize from the Folger Shakespeare Library.
Du Bois’s Telegram is a brilliant inquiry into the institutions—from the CIA to the foundations and literary magazines it funded—that inform and shape literary production. The promoted, the funded and heralded, from Richard Wright to Gertrude Stein to James Baldwin, do the work of the nation state under the umbrella of culture. Our complicit freedoms are brought out in the open in this thought-provoking and erudite book. This is not a book to agree or disagree with, but rather a compelling argument that brings relevant facts forward for clear-eyed consideration. One would be remiss to pass on such essential research and analysis.—Claudia Rankine

Offers a sobering historical account of various resistant movements in U.S. literature through and since the twentieth century—and how easily they were neutralized by dominant forces. What I so admire about this book, in addition to its compelling and cogent analysis, is that Spahr refuses easy answers: she is just as skeptical of poetry’s revolutionary potential as she is committed to its possibility. It’s essential reading for anyone interested in the relationship between poetry and politics.—Jameson Fitzpatrick, Poetry

This book is thrilling. Spahr develops a truly original, even clarion, account of the relationship of social movements, avant-garde and politically charged writing, and the foreign policy arm of the United States. A great deal of the power of Du Bois’s Telegram has to do with the way it makes totally unexpected connections among separate discourses, and makes the connections seem necessary and obvious, at a stroke. It is common to praise a book for being potentially field-changing; this book suggests the possibility of changing several fields.—Christopher Nealon, Johns Hopkins University

An important look at the history of American literature.—Library Journal (starred review)

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