9780820347615-0820347612-A Sense of Regard: Essays on Poetry and Race

A Sense of Regard: Essays on Poetry and Race

ISBN-13: 9780820347615
ISBN-10: 0820347612
Edition: First Edition
Author: Laura McCullough
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Format: Paperback 320 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780820347615
ISBN-10: 0820347612
Edition: First Edition
Author: Laura McCullough
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Format: Paperback 320 pages

Summary

A Sense of Regard: Essays on Poetry and Race (ISBN-13: 9780820347615 and ISBN-10: 0820347612), written by authors Laura McCullough, was published by University of Georgia Press in 2015. With an overall rating of 4.1 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent A Sense of Regard: Essays on Poetry and Race (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

A Sense of Regard, says Laura McCullough, “is an effort to collect the voices of living poets and scholars in thoughtful and considered exfoliation of the current confluence of poetry and race, the difficulties, the nuances, the unexamined, the feared, the questions, and the quarrels across aesthetic camps and biases.”

The contributors discuss issues as various as their own diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds. Their essays, which range in style from the personal and lyrical to the critical, are organized into four broad groupings: Americanism, the experience of unsilencing and crossing borders, interrogating whiteness, and language itself. To read them is to listen in as the contributors speak what they know, discover what they do not, and in the process often find something new in themselves and their topic. As a reader you are invited, says McCullough, “to be moved from one sense of regard to another: to be provoked and to linger in that state. . . . To query, quarrel, and consider.”

A Sense of Regard grew out of a recent gathering of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP), where a poet’s comments on the work of another sparked impassioned and contentious conversations in person, in print, and online. Though race is often thought of as an age-old topic in poetry, McCullough saw clearly that there is still much to discuss, study, and tease apart. Moving the conversation beyond the specificity of those initial AWP encounters, with their mostly black/white focus on race, these essays provide a context and a safe starting place for some urgently needed discussions we too rarely have.

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