-
-
Tags
- 9/11
- Allen Ginsberg
- Ambiguity
- America
- Anarchism
- Anarchist
- Anarchy
- Catalogs
- Contemporary Poetry
- crisis
- crisis and recovery
- Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
- Domination
- Existential Crisis
- Existentialism
- Federico Garcia Lorca
- Frank O'Hara
- Ginsberg
- Hart Crane
- hope
- Howl
- Jean Toomer
- Juliana Spahr
- Langston Hughes
- Lilacs
- Marx
- Michael Cunningham
- modernism
- Music
- nature
- Nature Poetry
- Optimism
- Pablo Neruda
- Personism
- Poetics
- Politics
- radical
- radicalism
- Sexuality
- Transcendence
- Walt Whitman
- War
- Whitman
- William Carlos Williams
- Yusef Komunyakaa
-
Recent Posts
ClassWrap
Author Archives: Charles Carmody
Walt Whitman, Bruce Springsteen, and The Working Class Hero
For my final paper, I will be exploring the lineage and relationship between Walt Whitman and Bruce Springsteen. By looking at these two fully “American” figures, I will be viewing their writings as it pertains to the American working class. … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Comments Off on Walt Whitman, Bruce Springsteen, and The Working Class Hero
Killing in the Name of
I find the final pages of Juliana Spahr’s this connection as some of the most interesting verses in her long poem. Throughout the poem, she is writing about and combining the micro and the macro, the “beloved and the afar” … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Comments Off on Killing in the Name of
George Oppen and Objectifying the Self
maude lebowski painting sceneUploaded by thewholovebu. – Check out other Film & TV videos. (please watch before reading) You may be asking yourself, “How does this short clip from the cult classic film The Big Lebowski apply to George Oppen … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Comments Off on George Oppen and Objectifying the Self
Life is Art: A Look at O’Hara’s “A Step Away From Them”
Frank O’Hara’s poem, “A Step Away from Them,” is described by Brad Gooch as “a record for history of the sensations of a sensitive and sophisticated man in the middle of the twentieth century walking through what was considered by … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Comments Off on Life is Art: A Look at O’Hara’s “A Step Away From Them”
The American Crisis Unresolved?
Allen Ginsberg’s poem “America” seems to be a f$$$ you to the red, white, and blue. The sarcasm and irony behind Ginsberg’s words seep out of his lines and blur the image of the country that birthed this poet. He … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
5 Comments
Walt Whitman, Wendell Barry, and the Workings of an Agrarian Poet
As we begin to look at the national and international poets and writers inspired by Walt Whitman, it has become even more clear to me the vast influence cast by Walt Whitman upon 19th and 20th century literature. Since I … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Comments Off on Walt Whitman, Wendell Barry, and the Workings of an Agrarian Poet
Whitman Inspired Days
This morning I feel as if I had a Whitmanian moment. I woke up feeling like dirty socks after a night of too much soda drinking, and I had an experience that not only helped me transcend my feelings of … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
3 Comments
Whitman’s Reconciliation
I really enjoyed the poems we read from Drum Taps for today and found that I favored these poems over Whitman’s Inscriptions and Song of Myself. I certainly enjoyed both of these works, but I feel that the poems in … Continue reading
Whitman the Astronomer
In class on Tuesday, we discussed the multitudes of Walt Whitman. He was described as the naturalist, the politician, the prophet, the solitary singer, but I never would have thought to call him Whitman the astronomer. However, I found an … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
2 Comments