Literature & literary studies:

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British Poetry of the 1970s
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$62.00
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Description

"There are several reasons for writing about the Seventies at this point. One is a reading of a recent collection of memories of the decade by participants. My impression was that they couldn't remember the period - too much time had gone by. They had lost all sense of differentiation and were writing about 1975 as if it was 2015. It is also possible that any attitudes of the previous time which didn't chime with current positions were being written out, consciously or unconsciously. The extent of the mismatch is of great importance, I think. This suggested that there was a real problem with memory, justifying an account based on contemporary documents. The other problem with memory is that we are living in a splinter dictatorship, a cultural phase where the forces of convergence have stacked arms and opinions are split up into small groups. How can there be a collective memory when there is no single point on which all factions agree? so how can I record collective memory? in what sense is any statement about poetry true? But this argues even more for putting facts down and increasing the area free from malicious invention. We need to think about the divergence as a phenomenon in itself, a kind of cultural gravity that guides all the watercourses. The splintering allows local freedom at most locations - what it does not allow is unifying literary opinion." -Andrew Duncan

Author Biography:

Andrew Duncan was born in 1956. He was brought up in Loughborough and lives in Nottingham. He studied Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic at Cambridge. He has been publishing poetry since the late 1970s, some eleven books in all, and has published eight volumes of poetry criticism.
Release date NZ
April 15th, 2022
Author
Pages
324
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Dimensions
152x229x19
ISBN-13
9781848617490
Product ID
35744987

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