Affect, Psychoanalysis, and American Poetry: This Feeling of Exaltation
By (Author) John Steen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
12th July 2018
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: poetry and poets
Literary studies: from c 2000
811.5409
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
494g
Poetry has often been defined by its closure, its condensation of meaning and value into discrete, self-referential textual objects. Affect, Psychoanalysis and American Poetry challenges the dominant metaphor of poetic containers by turning to recent poetic texts that represent the contagious and uncontainable feelings of anxiety, grief, shame, and rage. From modernists Wallace Stevens to mid-century poets Randall Jarrell, Robert Creeley and Ted Berrigan, and finally to contemporary practitioners Aaron Kunin and Claudia Rankine, John Steen argues that new poetic techniques arise from the poetic productivity of negative affects, and that a new model of poetic value can be found in poems that areinstead of containerspermeable, social spaces of intimacy, attachment, and withdrawal. Drawing from object relations, psychoanalysis, queer theory, and affect theory, Affect, Psychoanalysis, and American Poetry finds poetrys singularity in its unique capacity to represent anew the transmissible, relational, and uncontainable valences of feeling that structure and destabilize social life.
John Steen is an English instructor at The Galloway School, USA.