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A Sense of Regard: Essays on Poetry and Race [Paperback]

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  • Category: Books (Literary Criticism)
  • ISBN-10:  0820347612
  • ISBN-10:  0820347612
  • ISBN-13:  9780820347615
  • ISBN-13:  9780820347615
  • Publisher:  University of Georgia Press
  • Publisher:  University of Georgia Press
  • Pages:  320
  • Pages:  320
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2015
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2015
  • SKU:  0820347612-11-MING
  • SKU:  0820347612-11-MING
  • Item ID: 100043227
  • Seller: ShopSpell
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  • Delivery by: Nov 28 to Nov 30
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LAURA McCULLOUGH is an associate professor of English at Brookdale Community College. Her essays, criticism, poems, creative nonfiction, and short fiction have appeared in a wide range of literary magazines and journals, and her books include the poetry collections Rigger Death & Hoist Another, Panic, Speech Acts, and What Men Want. Her hybrid works include Ripple & Snap and Shuttle*Voices*Wind. She is the editor of the anthology The Room and the World: Essays on the Poet Stephen Dunn. McCullough is also the founding editor of Mead: The Magazine of Literature and Libations, for which she currently acts as an editor-at-large.

A Sense of Regard, says Laura McCullough, is an effort to collect the voices of living poets and scholars in thoughtful and considered exfoliation of the current confluence of poetry and race, the difficulties, the nuances, the unexamined, the feared, the questions, and the quarrels across aesthetic camps and biases.

The contributors discuss issues as various as their own diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds. Their essays, which range in style from the personal and lyrical to the critical, are organized into four broad groupings: Americanism, the experience of unsilencing and crossing borders, interrogating whiteness, and language itself. To read them is to listen in as the contributors speak what they know, discover what they do not, and in the process often find something new in themselves and their topic. As a reader you are invited, says McCullough, to be moved from one sense of regard to another: to be provoked and to linger in that state. . . . To query, quarrel, and consider.

A Sense of Regard grew out of a recent gathering of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP), where a poet’s comments on the work of another l£Â

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