Poetics and Justice in America, Japan, and Taiwan : Configuring Change and Entitlement
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Focusing on literary language in popular media and performative venues, this book demonstrates how poetry is capable of meeting the challenges of calling out institutional entitlements and embodying change. Examining emergent communities, the author shows how contemporary poetry implicates itself in social and ecological relations or risks irrelevancy.
Poetics and Justice in America, Japan, and Taiwan shows how entitlements are implicated in all areas of lifehuman and nonhumanthat poetry reaches. Through a creative adaptation of Badious philosophical framing, this book argues that poetry matters as a form of media particularly suited to integrating diverse fields of knowledge and attention in newspapers, Tweets, and performance as well as volumes of poetry. Recasting intertextuality as more relational than referential, the author argues for the importance of poetry in realizing how social change and ecological justice are bound up in our orientations of affiliation. Each chapter focuses on particular sets of problems engaged by poets in different contexts to various ends in Japan, the US, and Taiwan. Some chapters explore the subtle implications of openly provocative styles, while others question the muted poetic intimations of injustices that are left standing unchanged in the name of aesthetics. Poets and performance artists featured include Amiri Baraka, John Ashbery, Tawara Machi, Rodrigo Toscano, Hung Hung, and John Cage. The author argues for examining poetic expressions in terms of what discursive fusions and affiliations they embody beyond the intimation of good intentions or ironic passing over.
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