Contemporary American Poetry:A Poetics of Politics
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Faculty of English
Abstract
This dissertation examines poetry that explores the interconnected relationship
among art, life, and society. Therefore, socially critical verse is taken as political poetry. This
work examines contemporary American poetry in connection with a long tradition and body
of earlier poetry of this type. As such, postmodern as well as the counter poetic traditions in
the US are highlighted. Furthermore, the selected political poetry is approached using the
insights of various cultural theorists who connect art with society and ideology.
A leading political poet,Ezra Pound presents in his poetry criticism of various forms
of social degeneration. He is chiefly interested in economics and he identifies usury as the
cancer of society and pleads for its elimination. Perceiving order as the prime necessity of
society his poetry meditates on hero-worship. His stance against the then civilization leads
him to think of an ideal state which is an ordered society ruled by good leaders in the
economic system of Social Credit. To impart such message he employs the techniques of
grand collage and allusive writing.
Charles Olson, in the steps of Pound, creates a public, intellectual, and
interdisciplinary poetry. Engaged with a politics of principles, he repudiates subjectivity and
focuses on objectivism. His poetry criticizes the modern American materialist culture by
displaying its loss of center, and expresses a desire for change. It dramatizes the death of
order and knowledge due to widespread commercialization. Like Pound’s usury, he projects
pejorocracy as the fatal diseaseof civilization. As an alternative, Olson models a community-
based ideal state—polis—in his hometown of Gloucester that shelters lost knowledge and
social order. His poetry uses an elitist language and a mosaic of fragments. The poems
resemble the structure of the terminal moraine in terms of their derivations and fragments.
They focus on the poetic process and the intensity of reader’s participation.
The poets associated with the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E School have remarkably
borrowed from the Pound-Olson tradition of political poetry and poetics. But, they have also
experimented with newer methods and matters that deviate from the tradition. Ron
Silliman, for instance, propounds the proposition of the new sentence parataxis. The core of
his new sentence, above all, offers a social criticism. He is engaged with a politics of form—
new forms are sought because the old forms are unable to accommodate socio-political
contents and thereby fail to activate the reader. His poetry contains cultural commentaries
like the horror of war and the problems of the working class people. He actively criticizes the
market dominated American society and ridicules the abuses of capitalism like a Marxist. In
the manner of his precursors his poetry embraces an interdisciplinary method and a grand
collage structure. It also pleads for empowered readership.
Poetry, history, and politics go simultaneously in Barrett Watten’s writing. His poetry
is engaged with a general negativity. The principle of “disagreement” governs his poetic
quest.Negativity and disagreement ultimately lead him to envision a utopian state. Likewise,
it censures the prevalent horror of war and keeps a watchful gaze on foreign politics. It also
highlights the class issues and contains social commentary. As a rule, hispoems exploit
collage and interdisciplinary methods. Charles Bernstein, on the other hand, reveals the
relationship between aesthetics and politics. His poetry is always sympathetic to the lower
strata people and critical of capitalism. Utilizing writingas an engine for social change, it
excoriates the mechanical life style. Advocating an anti-absorptive poetic language, he uses
poetry as theory. Rejection of voice is heightened in his collage poems.
Analysis reveals that the socio-political poems of allthese writers are filled with
ideological convictions. This corpus of poetry is progressive writing and also the
quintessence of politically correct literature. In its form and content contemporary American
poetry largely resists the logic of postmodern consumerism, and these poets are the
dreamers of a better future. This contemporary political poetry escapes elitist and
totalitarian thoughts through the careful use of language to prosper a new-fashioned
utopian society.