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E-raamat: Lyric Eye: The Poetics of Twentieth-Century Surveillance [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(The University of Melbourne, Australia)
  • Formaat: 204 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Aug-2021
  • Kirjastus: Routledge India
  • ISBN-13: 9781003019954
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 189,26 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 270,37 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 204 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 06-Aug-2021
  • Kirjastus: Routledge India
  • ISBN-13: 9781003019954

This book presents the first detailed study of the relationship between poetry and surveillance. It critically examines the close connection between American lyric poetry and a burgeoning U.S. state surveillance apparatus from 1920 through the 1960s.



Lyric Eye: The Poetics of Twentieth-Century Surveillance presents the first detailed study of the relationship between poetry and surveillance. It critically examines the close connection between American lyric poetry and a burgeoning US state surveillance apparatus from 1920 to the 1960s. The book explores the myriad ways that poets—Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, W.H. Auden, Langston Hughes, James Baldwin, Sylvia Plath, Gertrude Stein, Robert Lowell, Allen Ginsberg and others—explored a developing and fraught environment in which the growing power of American investigative agencies, such as the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover, imposed new pressures on cultural discourse and personal identity. In analysing twentieth-century American poetry and its various ideas about "the self," Lyric Eye demonstrates the extent to which poetry and surveillance employ similar styles of information-gathering such as observation, overhearing, imitation, abstraction, repurposing of language, subversion, fragmentation and symbolism.

Ground-breaking and prescient, this book will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of literature, politics, surveillance and intelligence studies, and digital humanities.   

 

Acknowledgments ix
Copyright acknowledgments xi
Introduction: the observed of all observers 1(10)
1 Towards a theory of the Lyric Eye
11(38)
Why Lyric?
12(16)
Big blue eye: the new surveillance normal
28(11)
The FBI everybody knows
39(9)
Notes
48(1)
2 Hoover's optics: bureau reading and impractical criticism
49(30)
Every American is innocent: Hoover, the FBI and American literature
50(8)
Codes for everything and nothing: American criticism and surveillance
58(11)
Make it indecipherable: William Carlos Williams and Ezra Pound
69(8)
Notes
77(2)
3 Surveillance poetics abroad
79(40)
Seeing over seas: nationalism, modernism and countersurveillance
81(8)
Escaping the FB eyes: Langston Hughes and James Baldwin
89(12)
The secret agent: W.H. Auden writes American poems
101(17)
Notes
118(1)
4 Surveillance poetics at home
119(43)
Diver under a glass bell: containment and surveillance poetics
120(12)
The American suburbs: Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath as eyewitnesses
132(12)
Poetry, privacy and paranoia: (wire)tapping into the American Dream
144(17)
Notes
161(1)
Conclusion: poetry in the age of dataveillance 162(6)
Works cited 168(12)
Index 180
Tyne Daile Sumner is a researcher and teacher at the University of Melbourne, Australia. Her work explores the relationship between literature and surveillance, with a focus on the ways that poetry is engaged with concepts such as privacy, identity, confession and subjectivity in the context of digital technology and the increasing datafication of everyday life.